Archive for the ‘Rudy Giuliani’ Category

Giuliani Continues to Talk: Breaking My Heart

May 13, 2007

By John E. Carey
Peace and Freedom
May 13, 2007

He’s a Catholic that believes more in adoption than abortion. But Rudy Giuliani is also making it abundantly clear that he favors a woman’s right to have an abortion.

On “Fox News Sunday” with Chris Wallace, the former Mayor of New York City fell short of calling a fetus a “person” but he seemed to be pondering his answer when Mr. Wallace asked.

Mr. Giuliani didn’t seem to allay fears that he himself generated at a debate with other potential Republican Presidential candidates at last week’s first Republican debate. At that time, he seemed to be saying it was O.K. with him if the Supreme Court set abortion aside and it was also O.K. with him if abortion was allowed to continue.

Brit Hume said Mr. Giuliani was “Pro choice with restrictions.”

I wish Mr. Giuliani had been articulate enough to describe his own position that way.

Mr. Giuliani has a quirky way of getting excited and running his words out too quickly. He does not sound thoughtful and measured and presidential to me but excited and anxious and edgy. His words seem to heat up and speed up like the arsonist’s fire when the flame hits the accelerant.

While some candidates sound like they are mouthing well tested sound bites from stale point papers, Mr. Giuliani sounds like he is making up a newly nuanced position each time he speaks.

This may be more my heart listening than my ear. As I live in a Vietnamese family that often doesn’t speak English I have become skilled at reading tone of voice, body language, speed of delivery and things like that. We call it, “Listening with one’s heart.”

Mr. Giuliani is breaking my heart.

Just one impression/opinion but I do not think Mr. Giuliani improved his position in any way on Sunday. In fact, the more he talks the less I like his chances.

Guiliani transcrip with Chris Wallace on the Fox News Sunday program:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,271917,00.html

An Incomplete Field

May 4, 2007

First impressions of the GOP’s 2008 candidates.

The Wall Street Journal
May 4, 2007

They stood earnestly in a row, combed, primped and prepped, as Nancy Reagan gazed up at them with courteous interest. But behind the hopeful candidates, a dwarfing shadow loomed, a shadow almost palpable in its power to remind Republicans of the days when men were men and the party was united. His power is only increased by his absence. But enough about Fred Thompson.Read the rest at:

http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/pnoonan/?id=110010023

Three Good Options for The Right

March 8, 2007

 By George F. Will
The Washington Post
Thursday, March 8, 2007; Page A23

The axiom is as old as human striving: The perfect is the enemy of the good. In politics this means that insisting on perfection in a candidate interferes with selecting a satisfactory one.

Which is why the mood of many of the 6,300 people, lots of them college age, who registered at last week’s Conservative Political Action Conference here, was unreasonably morose. Sponsored annually by the American Conservative Union, CPAC is the conservative movement’s moveable feast. Many at CPAC seemed depressed by the fact, as they see it, that the top three Republican candidates — John McCain, Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani– are flawed. Such conservatives should conduct a thought experiment.

Suppose someone seeking the presidential nomination had, as a governor, signed the largest tax increase in his state’s history and the nation’s most permissive abortion law. And by signing a law institutionalizing no-fault divorce, he had unwittingly but substantially advanced an idea central to the campaign for same-sex marriages — the minimalist understanding of marriage as merely a contract between consenting adults to be entered into or dissolved as it suits their happiness.

Question: Is it not likely that such a presidential aspirant would be derided by some of today’s fastidious conservatives? A sobering thought, that, because the attributes just described were those of Ronald Reagan.

Now, consider today’s three leading candidates, starting with McCain, the mere mention of whose name elicited disapproving noises at CPAC. This column holds the Olympic record for sustained dismay about McCain’s incorrigible itch to regulate political speech (“campaign finance reform”). But it is not incongruous that he holds Barry Goldwater’s Senate seat.

McCain, whose career rating from the ACU is 82 (100 being perfect), voted against the prescription drug entitlement in 2003 because of its cost. He is a strong critic of corporate welfare. And since 2003 he has been insisting that the mission in Iraq requires more troops– even more than will be there during the current “surge.”

Conservatives’ anger about McCain coexists with others’ discordant criticism of him for “pandering” to conservatives. Astonishingly, a recent Vanity Fair profile accused McCain of “toeing the conservative line” on immigration, which shows that Vanity Fair does not know what that line is.

The journalistic rule is that conservatives pander, liberals “grow.” When Al Gore, Dick Gephardt, Jesse Jackson and Dennis Kucinich changed from being pro-life to pro-abortion, their conversions, a price of admission into Democratic presidential politics, were often described as conscientious “growth.” But when McCain, who opposed President Bush’s tax cuts, concludes on the basis of the humming economy that they should be made permanent, it’s called pandering.

At CPAC, Romney gave the most polished speech, touching all the conservative movement’s erogenous zones, pointedly denouncing the “McCain-Kennedy” immigration bill and promising to seek repeal of the McCain-Feingold law regulating campaign speech. Romney, however, is criticized by many conservatives for what they consider multiple conversions of convenience — on abortion, stem cell research, gay rights, gun control. But if Romney is now locked into positions that these conservatives like, why do they care so much about whether political calculation or moral epiphany moved him there?

Giuliani is comprehensively out of step with social conservatives and likely to remain so. He probably assumes two things.

First, that some of the social issues have gone off the boil because argument about them seems sterile: Democrats have scant interest in federal gun control legislation; scientific advances may obviate the need for using embryonic stem cells; cultural changes will do more than any feasible legislation could do to reduce abortion numbers; the way to change abortion law is to change courts by means of judicial nominations of the sort Giuliani promises to make.

Second, that his deviations from the social conservatives’ agenda are more than balanced by his record as mayor of New York. That city was liberalism’s laboratory as it went from the glittering metropolis celebrated in the movie “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” (1961) to the dystopia of the novel “Bonfire of the Vanities” (1987). Giuliani successfully challenged the culture of complaint that produced the politics of victimhood that resulted in government by grievance groups.

He favors school choice, he opposes bilingual education that confines students to linguistic ghettos and he ended the “open admissions” policy that degraded City University, once an effective instrument of upward mobility. The suggestion that Sept. 11 required city tax increases triggered from Giuliani four adjectives: “dumb, stupid, idiotic and moronic.”

Conservatism comes in many flavors. None seems perfect for every conservative’s palate; most should be satisfactory to most conservatives.

georgewill@washpost.com


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 309 other followers