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President Bush concluded his visit to the White House press corps’ farewell to the old briefing room with a heartfelt, “For those of you going to Crawford, saddle up!” And late Thursday afternoon he was indeed at his beloved Texas ranch.
As I walked out of the neurological intensive care unit, my eyes met the eyes of the wife, the son and the daughter.
Eighty-two-thousand instead of 120,000 this week. One million Americans have given up even looking for non-existant jobs. Obama promised that his stimulus package would keep Unemployment down below 8 percent. The White House and the Democrats in the Senate and Congress said the stimulus would lower unemployment to 6 percent. Folks, we have an America in “free fall.” An America saddled with a $15 trillion Obama deficit. An America headed for the “poor house”, a third-world economy.
It has become a White House ritual of late: President Bush appearing before the press corps to praise a trusted senior White House aide who is resigning to return to private life.
They say in Washington that no one’s indispensable, but for the Bush White House Karl Rove comes close. Now, in another blow the White House didn’t really need, Rove has announced that he is resigning at the end of the month and returning to Texas.
May 6, 2005
Many of the war protesters here and around the country say that they also support the troops — that they want them promptly brought home safe. Some also maintain their opposition to the war does not make them anti-American.
Our View: Arizona is supposed to have one of the toughest laws in the country to keep our elected officials focused on doing their present job instead of constantly looking ahead to higher office. In reality, the law is a paper tiger.
Q: I sent my laptop to a repair facility for warranty service and when I got it back, all my files were gone! How can they get away with this kind of treatment and what could I have done to prevent it?
The option of flexible hours is a popular one for timestrapped employees. It helps you control your life, it costs the employer nothing, and the work still gets done. But even this benefit has a major drawback.
“I thought the purpose of Presidents Day was getting steep discounts on furniture and linen.”
If you're looking for an indicator of the condition of society, go no further than to note that we live in an age where even the president of the United States has to schedule his addresses to the nation to avoid conflicts with "American Idol" and playoff games.
Even so, it's likely that only the most dyed-in-the-wool Arizona political junkies are likely to watch President Barack Obama's State of the Union Address Tuesday and his remarks in Phoenix the next day.
You can see this presidential double-feature as a chance for Arizonans to finally hear Obama at some length. (Extreme partisans who don't ever want to hear what a candidate of their least favorite party has to say should feel free to stop reading at any time.)
We've been hearing the Republican candidates for months now; they just finished their 17th televised debate the other night. Another is scheduled for the Mesa Arts Center in late February at which they are likely to be setting up only one lectern and opening the doors to let in some crickets, but few others.
While today presidential visits to Arizona are relatively commonplace, it wasn't always that way.
Presidents and Arizona have a relatively brief history. For America's first century and a half as a nation, Arizona was probably too far away for them to plan on actually coming here. Maybe one of them was on a train that went through here on the way to California, where at least there was a beach waiting after the week or so it took to get there, but that's not the kind of stuff you find in most history books.
Theodore Roosevelt famously spoke on the steps of Old Main of what was to become Arizona State University in 1911 - two years after he left office. He was here for the dedication of a dam on the Salt River that was named for him, so it makes one wonder whether he would have bothered otherwise.
Obama has been to Arizona a few times since his election: In February 2010, he came to Dobson High School in Mesa to explain a plan to melt frozen credit markets to spur lending to desperate homeowners. Eleven months later he was at the University of Arizona in Tucson to mourn the victims of the Jan. 8, 2011, shootings at a supermarket that killed six and wounded 13, including U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz.
In recent times, Democratic presidents have made few visits to Arizona and until George W. Bush, Republican ones didn't believe they really needed to, given the significant GOP voter registration margin here. Bush was in the Valley so often during his term that commuters began to commit to memory his usual motorcade route between Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport to the Royal Palms hotel.
You have to go back to John F. Kennedy's appearance at the Westward Ho Hotel on Central Avenue five days before his 1960 election to hear a Democratic candidate talk about Arizona's comfortable Democratic majority, which they had then.
By the time Bill Clinton arrived one afternoon in May 1992, the streak of Republicans winning Arizona was 10 in a row. Clinton showed up at an electrical workers' union hall near 36th Street and McDowell and spoke a few minutes before heading up to Paradise Valley for a private fund-raiser. He was gone before noon the next day.
Clinton lost Arizona in 1992, but broke the Republican streak in 1996.
If there's any thread running through the travels of chief executives to our state, it's that the issues may change, but the rhetoric is getting more familiar. More than 51 years ago, then-Sen. Kennedy's brief remarks in Phoenix included this passage that I found on the website of the American Presidency Project of the University of California, Santa Barbara:
"This is an important election. It involves the future of this country. The presidency is a key office, holding great power and influence, given to it by the Constitution, and also given to it by the course of events. We cannot possibly afford in these difficult times, when the president of the United States must set before the American people the unfinished business of our society, we cannot possibly afford to put the chief responsibility upon those who look back."
In that speech, Kennedy made a brief reference to Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., accurately predicting Goldwater's presidential campaign of 1964.
Obama will not venture a guess about the Republican nominee in 2016, or even 2012.
But we can only hope that his visit Wednesday will mark the start of a commitment by both eventual nominees to tone down the finger-pointing and ramp up the how-to-get-us-where-we-need-to-go.
This is information currently found by trolling campaign websites, something that mostly dyed-in-the-wool political junkies engage in, something that not enough typical voters do.
This explains why so often we get the politicians we do, by electing finger-pointers-in-chief who dare not cross "American Idol."
Dan K. Thomasson: The president apparently has decided that Republicans are irrelevant if not downright obsolete and it is best to ignore them, especially those in Congress.
PARIS - Conservative Nicolas Sarkozy won the French presidency by a comfortable margin Sunday and immediately signaled his victory would mean friendly relations with the United States.
HOT SPRINGS - Richard Kelley, stepfather of former President Bill Clinton, died Wednesday at his home. He was 91. Kelley, a retired salesman, had been in declining health in recent weeks, and the former president visited him Monday.
Monday was Presidents Day, which meant school was out. I strongly suspect that our schoolchildren did not spend the day meditating on the leaders of our country. I suspect they found other diversions.
President Obama has delivered his address on the 2012 budget. Predictably, conservatives will denounce it as being vague and lacking detail. Sure it was. And predictably, liberals will hail it as giving direction to Congress as to what he will not sign into law in an effort to protect social programs. Surely it did. But the president made it abundantly clear that even cuts to spending in these social programs remain on the table.
If you're looking for an indicator of the condition of society, go no further than to note that we live in an age where even the president of the United States has to schedule his addresses to the nation to avoid conflicts with "American Idol" and playoff games.
JERUSALEM - A spokesman for the Israeli parliament says President Moshe Katsav has asked to be temporarily removed from office.
SAN FRANCISCO — Tiger Woods provided a fitting conclusion Sunday to a perfect week at the Presidents Cup, for him and an American team that remains perfect at home.
The abortion flap over President Barack Obama's invitation to speak at Notre Dame's graduation is getting all the attention.
In a one-page written statement WESTMARC President and CEO Jack Lunsford announced he is retiring from WESTMARC due to health reasons. Lunsford also made the formal announcement during his annual report at WESTMARC’s annual Meeting and Economic Forecast Breakfast Wednesday, while unofficially celebrating his seventh anniversary as president and CEO.
Martin Schram: "Transparency" is the most promising buzzword of the 21st Century. Politicians promise it whenever they campaign. CEOs promise it whenever they get caught. Obama promised us a transparent presidency -- but so far has just given us a translucent presidency.
"Hot dogs with Herb," the casual, lunch-with-the-boss program that literally and symbolically ushered in a new era at Scottsdale-based Dial Corp. could soon become "Brats with Brad."
NEW YORK - Mel Karmazin resigned suddenly as president and chief operating officer of Viacom Inc., owner of CBS, MTV and Nickelodeon, as the media giant seeks to find a successor for its 81-year-old chairman and CEO, Sumner Redstone.
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
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