Looks like he doesn't want to be connected with sarah, but he'd best be careful about biting the hand that fed him.
Or, like his spokeman said in the article:
He's at work....as a Senator.....doing what he was elected to do.......in Congress......
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Looks like he doesn't want to be connected with sarah, but he'd best be careful about biting the hand that fed him.
Really?Looks like he doesn't want to be connected with sarah, but he'd best be careful about biting the hand that fed him.
Or, like his spokeman said in the article:
He's at work....as a Senator.....doing what he was elected to do.......in Congress......
Really?Looks like he doesn't want to be connected with sarah, but he'd best be careful about biting the hand that fed him.
Or, like his spokeman said in the article:
He's at work....as a Senator.....doing what he was elected to do.......in Congress......
The senate was in recess at the time, what 'work' was he doing?
Of course, how silly to assume otherwise.Really?Or, like his spokeman said in the article:
He's at work....as a Senator.....doing what he was elected to do.......in Congress......
The senate was in recess at the time, what 'work' was he doing?
You do realise that these here "Senators" are relative "Big Wigs".....he's probably preparing some important piece of legislation that will SAVE THE NATION TRILLION$!!!!!
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
ANDY BARR | 4/12/10 4:09 PM EDT Text Size- + reset
Brown was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston.
AP
Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston, his staff told POLITICO, and did not intend his absence to come off as a snub.
Brown spokeswoman Gail Gitcho told POLITICO that coming off of a two week legislative recess, Brown had always planned to be in Washington this week.
Brown drew notice Monday after the Boston Herald reported that Brown was skipping the rally.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
Now Del is a useful idiot and Boston Herald is a left wing rag.
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
ANDY BARR | 4/12/10 4:09 PM EDT Text Size- + reset
Brown was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston.
AP
Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston, his staff told POLITICO, and did not intend his absence to come off as a snub.
Brown spokeswoman Gail Gitcho told POLITICO that coming off of a two week legislative recess, Brown had always planned to be in Washington this week.
Brown drew notice Monday after the Boston Herald reported that Brown was skipping the rally.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
Lame excuse.
Not quite what the slant to the OP is attempting...
Scott Brown is very much with the Romney camp and is looking to support Romney in 2012 as he also attempts to navigate his own political re-election to the Senate. He is trying to remain loyal to Romney, as well as give continued appreciation for the Tea Party movement that played a crucial role in getting him elected as a Republican in long-liberal Kennedy-land.
The repeated attempts to corner the Tea Party movement into a limited and narrow group of participants is simple folly. It is proving a far greater and politically substantial group of loose affiliations, varied backgrounds, and far more diversity than the mainstream media and DC politicians care to admit. It is in fact, the most significant political movement since the Reagan Revolution of 30 years ago. The Tea Party will play a very significant role in deciding the extent of the Republican victories in 2010 - more uncertain is its continued viability heading into 2012 and beyond.
As for Scott Brown - his election remains as perhaps the single greatest bellwether of what is going to unfold in 2010. The Republican landslide is going to prove stunning, as the rising tide of voter discontent has yet to be fully realized by the pundits and pollsters...
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
Anyone who read the linky in th OP would have been able to figure out the Boston Herald was creating a tempest in a tea-pot.
Could also be taken as Brown dissing the people who got him elected.
it could be, in the sense that tea partiers did vote for him, but i don't think that they made the difference. for better or worse, tea partiers are seen as far right and the far right has nowhere else to go two years from now. he needs to solidify his support among rational people and this will definitely go a ways toward doing that, assuming i'm rational.
Not quite what the slant to the OP is attempting...
Scott Brown is very much with the Romney camp and is looking to support Romney in 2012 as he also attempts to navigate his own political re-election to the Senate. He is trying to remain loyal to Romney, as well as give continued appreciation for the Tea Party movement that played a crucial role in getting him elected as a Republican in long-liberal Kennedy-land.
The repeated attempts to corner the Tea Party movement into a limited and narrow group of participants is simple folly. It is proving a far greater and politically substantial group of loose affiliations, varied backgrounds, and far more diversity than the mainstream media and DC politicians care to admit. It is in fact, the most significant political movement since the Reagan Revolution of 30 years ago. The Tea Party will play a very significant role in deciding the extent of the Republican victories in 2010 - more uncertain is its continued viability heading into 2012 and beyond.
As for Scott Brown - his election remains as perhaps the single greatest bellwether of what is going to unfold in 2010. The Republican landslide is going to prove stunning, as the rising tide of voter discontent has yet to be fully realized by the pundits and pollsters...
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
ANDY BARR | 4/12/10 4:09 PM EDT Text Size- + reset
Brown was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston.
AP
Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston, his staff told POLITICO, and did not intend his absence to come off as a snub.
Brown spokeswoman Gail Gitcho told POLITICO that coming off of a two week legislative recess, Brown had always planned to be in Washington this week.
Brown drew notice Monday after the Boston Herald reported that Brown was skipping the rally.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
Well darn, this is gonna take away some tingles for the liberals.
ANDY BARR | 4/12/10 4:09 PM EDT Text Size- + reset
Brown was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston.
AP
Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.) was never planning to attend a tea party rally featuring Sarah Palin this week in Boston, his staff told POLITICO, and did not intend his absence to come off as a snub.
Brown spokeswoman Gail Gitcho told POLITICO that coming off of a two week legislative recess, Brown had always planned to be in Washington this week.
Brown drew notice Monday after the Boston Herald reported that Brown was skipping the rally.
In a story headlined Scott Brown snubs Sarah Palin, bags Tea Party rally, Herald reporter Edward Mason wrote that Browns decision to skip the first big rally in Boston by the group whose members are credited with helping him win election has some experts saying hes tossed the Tea Party overboard, as he prepares for re-election in 2012.
The story was fodder for bloggers eager to highlight any GOP slight directed at Palin or a rift between a GOP lawmaker and the tea party movement.
the rest.
Scott Brown camp: No snub intended - Andy Barr - POLITICO.com
So? In essence we have a thread based upon a lie. "The SNUB" That Never existed. Classic.