Now, what the President's father might call the "ugly S-word" has descended on his son's administration - further damaging a presidency that was already crippled and on the verge of unraveling.
"We used to have a problem with hubris," one senior Bush adviser said glumly. "Well, there ain't much swagger right now."
The liberals must not realize that they are setting the stage for another comeback by George W. Bush. William Kristol of The Weekly Standard and one of the pre-imminent conservative voices in Washington DC has a wonderful piece posted which states the case for Bush's comeback very well.
With the dénouement of the Miers fiasco and the Fitzgerald investigation, President Bush's beaten-down political fortunes should be ripe for a rebound. As we've said before, the recipe for starting a rally is straightforward: Get back to basics on the economy, the courts, and foreign policy. Go on the offensive in all of these areas. To regain the ground that was lost and to forge further ahead will require energy, discipline, and boldness from the Bush administration, and from the president himself.
John Podhoretz, in a column which recalls the central thesis of Bill Sammon's marvelous book, MisUnderestimated, says that many people are "Misjudging Dubbya."
And remember, there are signs all over of great news. There is a good chance that Scooter Libby will never be convicted, and in any case, The White House went largely untouched on Friday.
Rush Limbaugh is stil lthe number one talk radio host by a wide margin. Charles Krauthammer reminds us of the things that didn't happen on Friday. The "Today Show" recently embarrassed themselves, and conservatives are still laughing.
Over at the JunkYard Blog, they are still detailing the failues of local and state government in the aftermath ofHurricane. Ian Schwartz exposes another foolish move by long time white house correspondent and battle-ax, Helen Thomas with great commentary and video of coverage.
There is more bad news for the supporters of Reform Ohio Now, and this is good news for Republicans in Ohio. There are maps available of the potential congressional distrticts which would exist if Reform Ohio Now is passed.
Charles Krauthammer destroys the credibility of Brent Scowcroft and hands President Bush the gift of his strong analysis.
Don't be fooled by the media, there is no season of discontent here in Ohio.
With the dénouement of the Miers fiasco and the Fitzgerald investigation, President Bush's beaten-down political fortunes should be ripe for a rebound. As we've said before, the recipe for starting a rally is straightforward: Get back to basics on the economy, the courts, and foreign policy. Go on the offensive in all of these areas. To regain the ground that was lost and to forge further ahead will require energy, discipline, and boldness from the Bush administration, and from the president himself.
John Podhoretz, in a column which recalls the central thesis of Bill Sammon's marvelous book, MisUnderestimated, says that many people are "Misjudging Dubbya."
And remember, there are signs all over of great news. There is a good chance that Scooter Libby will never be convicted, and in any case, The White House went largely untouched on Friday.
Rush Limbaugh is stil lthe number one talk radio host by a wide margin. Charles Krauthammer reminds us of the things that didn't happen on Friday. The "Today Show" recently embarrassed themselves, and conservatives are still laughing.
Over at the JunkYard Blog, they are still detailing the failues of local and state government in the aftermath ofHurricane. Ian Schwartz exposes another foolish move by long time white house correspondent and battle-ax, Helen Thomas with great commentary and video of coverage.
There is more bad news for the supporters of Reform Ohio Now, and this is good news for Republicans in Ohio. There are maps available of the potential congressional distrticts which would exist if Reform Ohio Now is passed.
Charles Krauthammer destroys the credibility of Brent Scowcroft and hands President Bush the gift of his strong analysis.
Don't be fooled by the media, there is no season of discontent here in Ohio.
0 comments:
Post a Comment