We need to stay focused!!!!

Stephanie

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Tilting the terror polls
Nov 16, 2005
by Brent Bozell

There are times when you watch the TV news that you wonder if the 2004 election is over yet. All the arguments that the Kerry campaign tried to use against George W. Bush on the war in Iraq and the war on terror are still being pounded. It's as if the liberal Democrat-media complex still can't get over the fact that Kerry lost, and can't accept that perhaps the election returns meant that the public endorsed Bush's record of defending the country.

The dominant theme of recent news coverage remains the MoveOn bumpersticker echo that Bush lied his way into war in Iraq. Howard Dean goes on "Meet the Press" to chant "corrupt and incompetent, corrupt and incompetent" to describe the Bush White House, which he says lied about Iraq and "has a fundamental problem telling the truth." Dean should first try to get through 10 minutes on TV without unloading a whopper -- like falsely accusing the chairman of the Maryland GOP of smearing him -- before he lectures others about truth-telling.

Make no mistake: The media's permanent campaign continues to undermine Bush's poll ratings in fighting the war on terrorism. The networks are now finding disapproval starting to rise above approval. CBS's most recent poll says 47 percent approve of the president's job on terrorism, to 46 percent disapproval. ABC's poll found 48 percent approval, 51 percent disapproval. NBC's latest poll skews way beyond that, with 39 percent approving, and 55 percent disapproving.

But are these surveys telling us the full story? For a completely different take on polling, there's the Fox-Opinion Dynamics poll. They asked: "Which one of the following do you think is the most likely reason there have been no attacks by al-Qaeda on the United States since the Sept. 11 attacks? Homeland security measures prevented them. No attacks were planned. The military action in Iraq prevented them." They found a mixed bag: 19 percent thought no attacks were planned, 24 percent thought homeland security measures stopped them, 16 percent credited war in Iraq with preventing them, and 26 percent said there was some combination of factors. Another 16 percent said they were unsure.


Perhaps the results are less important than the question. It recognized a fact that no one in the liberal media wants to acknowledge above a whisper: Doesn't Bush deserve some measure of credit for how or why the country has not been attacked again on his watch? It's obviously dangerous for President Bush to toot his own horn on this, just as it was foolish for presidential wanna-be Wesley Clark to promise there would be no terror attacks if he were president.

It's important to recognize that the liberal media polls often tilt their questions -- and their timing of questions -- with a political mission in mind. The last time these pollsters asked about the adequacy of our terrorism preparedness was in the wake of their overwrought hurricane Katrina coverage. They argued that since we weren't prepared for the hurricane, we weren't prepared for terrorists, either, and then touted their own poll results to remake the point. One week into the New Orleans festival of Bush-bashing, the NBC poll asked if America was prepared for a nuclear, chemical or biological attack, and found 19 percent said yes, 75 percent said no.

Conservatives need to focus the public's attention on what the liberal media fail to explore. Did the Clinton administration cripple Al Qaeda? No. They bombed a pharmaceutical plant in Sudan. They indicted Osama bin Laden in Manhattan. But Clinton's softness on terror goes unexplored. How well did the Carter administration do in fighting Iranian terrorists? He let American hostages rot in captivity for more than a year, and his military effort was no better than crashing helicopters in the desert. How in the world can the media offer these men platforms to give lectures on military leadership to President Bush?

Does anyone honestly believe that we would be much better off today if President Gore or President Kerry or President Dean was fighting the war on terror? The better question is whether there would have been anything much beyond the lip service and Manhattan indictments that Bill Clinton offered.

The best question remains: Should we approve of the national media's handling of the war on terror? Are they conducting one? Or are they undermining one? Are they making the country safer? Or are they still stuck on the Carter/Clinton model, that it's less important to defeat terrorists than it is to impress "world opinion"?

Brent Bozell is President of Media Research Center, a Townhall.com partner organization.
 
Tell that to the poll driven Republican Senators that went along with the minority party yesterday. What's with those ninnies, other than being afraid of the polls?
 
The American people have stated time and time again, with votes, that they are rejecting the philosophy of the Democratic party, yet these idiot Republicans keep comprimising and giving in to the Democrats. Winning is supposed to mean that you get your stuff done.
 
Kathianne said:
Tell that to the poll driven Republican Senators that went along with the minority party yesterday. What's with those ninnies, other than being afraid of the polls?

http://rightwingnuthouse.com/archives/2005/11/15/republican-nervous-nellies/

I guess I wasn't the only one ticked.

November 15, 2005
REPUBLICAN NERVOUS NELLIES
CATEGORY: War on Terror | Politics

Senate Republicans appear to be about ready to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory in Iraq. Just as the nascent Iraqi government starts to get up a head of steam in anticipation of next month’s elections, some “nervous Nellies” who worry about what the New York Times says about them appear to be willing to play the surrender card:

In a sign of increasing unease among Congressional Republicans over the war in Iraq, the Senate is to consider on Tuesday a Republican proposal that calls for Iraqi forces to take the lead next year in securing the nation and for the Bush administration to lay out its strategy for ending the war.

The proposal on the Iraq war, from Senator Bill Frist, the majority leader, and Senator John W. Warner, Republican of Virginia, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, would require the administration to provide extensive new quarterly reports to Congress on subjects like progress in bringing in other countries to help stabilize Iraq. The other appeals related to Iraq are nonbinding and express the position of the Senate.

It isn’t just that this is the absolute worst time for Senate Republicans to turn into jellyfish on the war. It is their pathetic belief that this will somehow shield them from criticism or lessen their association with the War in Iraq in any way. Surely they don’t believe it will have any affect on the White House. In which case, they are directing their concerns toward the Iraqi people and government. In fact, this is the primary reason they are giving for this surrender:


Mr. Warner said the underlying message was, “we really mean business, Iraqis, get on with it.” The senator, an influential party voice on military issues, said he did not interpret the wording of his plan as critical of the administration, describing it as a “forward-looking” approach.

“It is not a question of satisfaction or dissatisfaction,” he said. “This reflects what has to be done.”

Democrats said the plan represented a shift in Republican sentiment on Iraq and was an acknowledgment of growing public unrest with the course of the war and the administration’s frequent call for patience. “I think it signals the fact that the American people are demanding change, and the Republicans see that that’s something that they have to follow,” said Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic leader.

Well, Frist and Co. walked into that one, didn’t they? When Harry Reid says your on the side of the angels and that “the American people are demanding change” it begs the question: why not just throw in the towel now instead of waiting until next November?

By realizing Democratic talking points on the war, the Republican majority may just have taken an irrevocable step toward becoming the Republican minority.

As for the Iraqi government, here’s my friend AJ at Strata-Sphere:

A democratic and free Iraq does not take orders from doddling old fools in the US Senate. Who is being imperialistic now? And how about playing the Vietnam card.

Only a nitwit believes that the Iraqi government isn’t desperate to get rid of US troops and have their own army take control in fighting the insurgency. I daresay that any Iraqi politician coming out and saying that he likes anything about American troops patrolling his country – not to mention having those troops under American command and living in places where there is no Iraqi sovereignty – will not receive many votes at the polls. The fact is that Iraqi politicians are smarter than most Senators. At least in Iraq, the politicians are bright enough not to hand their opponents an election winning issue. The major political parties are all in support of getting Americans out as fast as possible. Why the “doddering old fools” in the Senate believe otherwise is a mystery.

The Administration will shrug off this nonsense as well it should. But the damage done to Republican Senators will evidence itself next November as I suspect several of their number will not be joining them when the next Congress convenes in January, 2007.

UPDATE

Hugh Hewitt has a similar take:

The proposed Senate resolution is an unmistakable vot-of-no-confidence in the Adminsitration, and the best gift the United States Senate could give Zarqawi and his terrorist ranks. It is almost incomprehensible that Senate Republicans could see this in any other fashion.
 
Bonnie said:
All I can do is :bang3: :bang3: :bang3: these days
Yeah, but at least some are speaking up on this:

http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/006/368oamaf.asp

Pathetic
The me-too Republicans wimp out on Iraq.
by William Kristol
11/15/2005 1:36:00 PM


Pathetic.

One expected no better of the Senate Democrats, who want to get out of Iraq as soon as possible, or sooner than possible--most of them don't really care--and who want to embarrass president Bush. But couldn't the Senate Republicans have stood and fought against passing an irresponsible resolution suggesting that Americans want to get out of Iraq more than we want to win?

The Republican leadership may have figured they didn't have the votes to defeat the Democratic proposal without giving their members a weaker alternative to vote for. But better to lose such a vote by a small margin than to go on record voting for a resolution that sends a signal of irresolution and weakness at precisely the time when a message of strength is most needed. After all, in precisely a month, the Iraqis will vote for their first government under the new constitution, and one thing they must weigh in their calculations is whether they can count on U.S. staying power in the fight against the terrorists. With today's vote in the Senate, the Republican leadership, apparently working hand in glove with White House staff, showed itself today to be tactically myopic and politically timid.

One hopes Republicans in the House will show more spine. One trusts that President Bush will not bend in any way to these winds of worry. One hopes that a year from now this vote is simply remembered as a minor hiccup on the way to success and victory in Iraq. But one doesn't win a war by showing weakness. And one doesn't win a political fight by half capitulating to one's opponents, and, in effect, accepting the premises of their critique.

All honor to the 13 Republican senators who stood up against the me-too, we-want-to-get-out-as-well-but-not-quite-as-quickly, Republican leadership: Bunning, Burr, Chambliss, Coburn, DeMint, Graham, Inhofe, Isakson, Kyl, McCain, Sessions, Thune, and Vitter. Let's hope their colleagues reconsider and join their ranks in the near future.

--William Kristol
 

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