Berkeley CSUA MOTD:Entry 45985
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2025/07/08 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
7/8     

2007/3/15-20 [Politics/Domestic/President/Bush] UID:45985 Activity:nil
3/15    What will Dubya do?  Leahy has subpoenaed the fired U.S. attorneys, and
        they will probably provide sworn testimony.  Months earlier Dubya's
        ppl told them he'd help them "land on their feet" if they didn't fight
        their firing.  You probably have some attorneys who already have found
        new jobs w/o Dubya's help, and some still looking.  You really just
        want to prevent any of these guys from testifying at all.  One approach
        that was tried was to ask for them to come in voluntarily, providing
        non-sworn testimony, but this was obvious and flaccid.
        ... The default approach would be to just let it happen, then spin it
        to death.
        \- does anybody want to bet on ALBERTO RESIGN?
           \_ already are - tradesports shows 55% for March resignation
              \- i meant on sloda.
              \_ How does this tradesports thing work? Can I make cash moneys
                 by becoming famous and then betting on myself to do things?
                 \_ http://csua.com/?entry=45235
          \_ http://www.csua.org/u/i9h (LA Times)
             "no leading Republican in Congress has stepped forward to defend
              Gonzales"
              Torquemada is toast.
2025/07/08 [General] UID:1000 Activity:popular
7/8     

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let's say GOP loses the House (and you held onto your contracts until the bitter end). If you can find someone who's selling 100 If you find someone who's selling 100 contracts (shares) at 12, and your dream comes true, then you make $880 profit. html "Edwards: Raise taxes to provide universal health care" Edwards will lose. Most Americans hate immigrants and social programs and thus don't want universal anything. PID=289 Link that talks about how CA spends $3200 per capita now versus $1240 (inflation adjusted) in the 1960s. I am actually most interested in what local+state taxes collected have looked like over time, both inflation adjusted and as a ... Let's see, the Dems could pick a liberal hippy that has 0% of getting any vote in the south, an outspoken female bitch that has no chance of getting elected, and a black man whos last name is one letter away from being Osama. Maybe the first time someone hacks a US election, it'll be the dems, maybe it'll be a foreign power, and maybe it'll be a super 37337 15 year old jolt addict from St. But as long as it didnt' happen yesterday, and didn't involve the GOP, ... All the idiots on the motd the last few months talking up an "October surprise" and "November surprise" was just a lot of hot air. The motd was filled with idiots who had no idea what they were talking about. com/s/nm/20070309/od_nm/germany_divorce_chainsaw_dc German man chainsaws house in two in divorce split HEIL CHURMAN SWISS JOHN you are no longer here but your spirit ... com TradeSports is a trading & betting exchange registered in Ireland, company number 352224.
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www.csua.org/u/i9h -> www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/politics/la-na-assess18mar18,0,1867548.story?track=mostviewed-homepage
Large Text Size Large Text Size Change text size NEWS ANALYSIS Gonzales' plight puts Bush at risk Aides focus on keeping the controversy at Justice from spreading. Leahy to pursue White House subpoenas WASHINGTON -- As more Republicans called last week on Alberto R Gonzales to resign, President Bush's aides began to look beyond the attorney general and focus on preventing the controversy over the firing of federal prosecutors from spreading -- and endangering Karl Rove, the president's top political advisor. "This is not going to go away," warned Joseph E DiGenova, a former US attorney in the Reagan administration. "I'm sure the president is going to let it go as long as he can ... The fracas over the fired prosecutors reflects a larger underlying problem for Bush: His political standing as president, already battered by the war in Iraq and domestic missteps like the handling of Hurricane Katrina, has only continued to erode since his party lost control of Congress in November. Initially, the dispute centered on the Justice Department, Gonzales and his top aides. But documents released last week suggested that Rove and former White House Counsel Harriet E Miers were also involved in the decision to fire eight US attorneys after the 2004 election. That brought the issue to the threshold of the Oval Office and prompted reporters to ask whether Bush had been involved. "I want you to be clear here: Don't go dropping it at the president's door," White House spokesman Tony Snow said Friday when asked about Bush's involvement. Although US attorneys are presidential appointees who can be removed at the president's discretion, the firings have flared into a potentially damaging issue for the administration because of indications that they may have resulted from political pressure. Gonzales and his aides initially told Congress that the prosecutors were fired because their performance was unsatisfactory. But documents released last week showed that officials also discussed whether the US attorneys had been "loyal Bushies," in the words of one Justice Department e-mail. Democrats, with their new majorities in the House and Senate, quickly jumped on the issue. Bush's diminished popularity, combined with his administration's disdain for Congress' view of legislative prerogatives, have given the president a slimmer margin for error -- even with members of his own party. "You've got Republicans in Congress who have run out their string with him," said Norman J Ornstein, a congressional scholar at the largely conservative American Enterprise Institute. The shift to Democratic control has accelerated the controversy. "If the Republicans were still in charge of Congress, even by one vote, the reaction to this would have been that it was just a personnel matter. The administration might still have had a problem, but it would have taken a lot longer to develop." Several leading Republicans said they expected Gonzales to resign in the next few weeks. They asked to speak on condition of anonymity because their comments conflicted with Bush's public position that his attorney general does not need to leave. Two Republican senators, John E Sununu of New Hampshire and Gordon H Smith of Oregon, and one Republican congressman, Dana Rohrabacher of Huntington Beach, have publicly called on Gonzales to resign. Others have said privately that the attorney general should leave. And no leading Republican in Congress has stepped forward to defend Gonzales -- a sign that any political support he once enjoyed has virtually disappeared. Democrats in the Senate and House have said they want Miers and Rove, President Bush's chief political strategist, to testify about their roles in the decision to fire the prosecutors. Rove, Miers and Gonzales have been among the president's closest aides for more than a decade; all worked for him when he was governor of Texas in the 1990s. Early reports had indicated that the idea of the firings originated with Miers, but on Friday, Snow said that may not be the case. Snow said the White House has not decided whether Rove or Miers should testify or whether to release internal documents to Congress, which has the power to subpoena witnesses -- Justice Department officials and others.