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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
All Eyes on Lieberman

By Manu Raju
Posted: 09/02/08 02:16 PM [ET]
ST. PAUL ? Democrats will closely watch Sen. Joe Lieberman?s (I-Conn.) primetime speech to the Republican convention Tuesday to see whether he attacks Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.

Despite some requests from Democratic senators that he not speak here, the Democrats? 2000 vice presidential nominee will deliver a nationally televised keynote speech Tuesday night.

The Connecticut senator has already angered some of his Democratic colleagues with his strong advocacy of Sen. John McCain?s (R-Ariz.) presidential bid, and animosity would be fueled if he delivers harsh words against Sen. Obama (D-Ill.), according to Democratic aides and senators.

Lieberman already has an uneasy alliance with Senate Democrats, and escalating tensions could put his chairmanship of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee in jeopardy next Congress.

Democratic leaders say they don?t have plans to remove Lieberman, who votes with them on most domestic issues, caucuses with them and gives them their 51-49 Senate majority. But that could change next year if Democrats win more seats in November and don?t need Lieberman to keep their Senate majority.

Lieberman has previously said he will not attack Obama, and instead will deliver a speech praising the service and bipartisan appeal of McCain, who is expected to accept the nomination here Thursday night.

A spokesman for Lieberman could not be reached for comment.

Democrats express concern that Lieberman, perhaps the country?s most prominent Jewish politician, could help push Jewish voters toward McCain and away from Obama.

?If he speaks out and raises questions, concerns about a candidate?s posture on an issue that Jews follow, absolutely the Jewish community will take it very seriously,? said Jason Isaacson, director of government and international affairs of the non-partisan American Jewish Committee.

Isaacson pointed to the country?s stance on Iran, the security of Israel and anti-Semitism as core Jewish concerns.

Over the last two presidential election cycles, Republicans have increased their standing with Jewish voters. According to the Pew Research Center, President Bush attracted about one-quarter of Jewish voters in 2004, six percentage points higher than in 2000.

In 2008, anywhere from 20 percent to 40 percent of the Jewish vote could go GOP, Isaacson predicted.

Conservative Republicans had expressed concern that McCain might pick Lieberman, who is pro-choice and liberal on most social issues, as his running mate. Now that Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has been chosen, they are embracing Lieberman?s role as a McCain surrogate who can testify to the senator?s bipartisan nature.

?That?s a benefit,? said Chuck Donovan, executive vice president of the Family Research Council.

Should McCain win the presidency, Lieberman is seen as a possible Cabinet member. That could spare him from retaliation within his Democratic Caucus, but also could raise concerns from the right if he is appointed to a domestic agency.

?I wouldn?t put him in the head of [Health and Human Services], but I would put him in the State Department and I?d put him in the Defense Department without hesitation,? said former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.).

Should be an interesting speech - anyone know when he's speaking?

-----------------------------------------

Can anyone say Secretary of State in a McCain Administration?



This post edited by wader 09:50 AM 09/03/2008
 

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Discussion Starter · #2 ·
Thompson hit a home run and Joe.....................

Well let's just say he can never go back.

 

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Discussion Starter · #5 ·
gman wrote:
Lieberman sux..........never liked him............the little leprechaun lookin troll..........

but................


Did you watch?

This post edited by wader 11:23 PM 09/02/2008
 

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Discussion Starter · #6 ·
latty wrote:
Nope.....but isn't that what he was praising Mc Cain about,.....Independence

Yes - but he not only burned every bridge behind him - he knocked out the pilings....

He basically looked into the camera in the last 5 minutes - said he was speaking directly to any Democrats watching & told them they were making a mistake.



That took guts. They will cut him off at the knees for that.
 

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wader wrote:
gman wrote:
Lieberman sux..........never liked him............the little leprechaun lookin troll..........

but................

Did you watch?

No, I was bowling.............:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:

I just don't like Lieberman.............:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:...........he's a....:rolleyes:.....he's a .......:rolleyes:........he's a...........:rolleyes:......dam phoney..........
 

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wader wrote:
latty wrote:
Nope.....but isn't that what he was praising Mc Cain about,.....Independence

Yes - but he not only burned every bridge behind him - he knocked out the pilings....

He basically looked into the camera in the last 5 minutes - said he was speaking directly to any Democrats watching & told them they were making a mistake.



That took guts. They will cut him off at the knees for that.

 

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wader wrote:
latty wrote:
Nope.....but isn't that what he was praising Mc Cain about,.....Independence

Yes - but he not only burned every bridge behind him - he knocked out the pilings....

He basically looked into the camera in the last 5 minutes - said he was speaking directly to any Democrats watching & told them they were making a mistake.



That took guts. They will cut him off at the knees for that.
It did take a pair to do that. I'd be interested to see where he goes from here. I bet he's got a big hangover this morning.
 

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(CNN) -- Democrats accused former colleague Sen. Joe Lieberman of misleading the Republican National Convention when he addressed them in a speech Tuesday night.
Joe Lieberman felt the brunt of Democratic attacks after he said Barack Obama didn't reach across party lines.

Joe Lieberman felt the brunt of Democratic attacks after he said Barack Obama didn't reach across party lines.

A senior Barack Obama campaign adviser said Lieberman flat-out lied when he told delegates that Obama never successfully reached across party lines.

"Joe Lieberman ought to be ashamed of himself for some of the things he said tonight, not as a Democrat but as an American," adviser Robert Gibbs said on "Larry King Live."

Lieberman, an independent senator from Connecticut who was the Democratic vice presidential candidate alongside Al Gore in 2000, has thrown his support behind John McCain, a longtime friend.

Lieberman urged Democratic and independent voters to make a change and vote for a McCain because, he said, he would do whatever it took to help the American public.

Lieberman attacked Obama's rhetoric, saying "eloquence is no substitute for a record."

"In the Senate, [Obama] has not reached across party lines to get anything significant done, nor has he been willing to take on powerful interest groups in the Democratic Party," Lieberman said in his speech. Video Watch Lieberman's speech »
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Gibbs stressed that it was a "flat-out lie" that Obama hasn't reached across party lines during his time in public office. Gibbs cited Obama's work with Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Indiana, to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists and with Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, on the government budget.

Gibbs blamed what he called lies like those perpetrated in Lieberman's speech for disillusioning voters and making them cynical of the government.

"I think [Lieberman] owes it to the American people to look into the camera and tell them the truth," Gibbs said.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid spokesman Jim Manley said Reid too was unhappy with the tone of Lieberman's speech.

"As the American people have made very clear, the last thing this country needs is another four years of the same old failed Bush-McCain policies of the past," Manley said.

Obama campaign spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement that the convention speeches also showed how out of touch the McCain campaign and Republicans are with the American people, neglecting to talk about one of the country's biggest problems: the economy.

"At a time when millions of Americans are struggling like never before to pay their mortgage, their medical bills and their gas bills, tonight's speakers at John McCain's Republican convention proved how out of touch their candidate is by saying not one word about his plans to put our economy back on track and provide real relief to middle-class families," Vietor said. "Apparently, John McCain's belief that we've made 'great progress' economically over the last eight years means he doesn't have to offer any plans at all to fix our ailing economy."

The Obama campaign also used a short speech delivered by President Bush via satellite to once again tie McCain to the unpopular president, as it has attempted to do throughout this election season.
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"Tonight, George Bush enthusiastically passed the torch to the man who's earned it by voting with him 90 percent of the time and who will continue this president's legacy for the next four years: his disastrous economic policies, his foreign policy that hasn't made us safer and his misguided war in Iraq that's costing us $10 billion a month," Obama campaign manager David Plouffe said.

"The man George Bush needs may be John McCain, but the change America needs is Barack Obama."
 

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likeitreallyis wrote:

Gibbs stressed that it was a "flat-out lie" that Obama hasn't reached across party lines during his time in public office. Gibbs cited Obama's work with Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Indiana, to keep nuclear weapons out of the hands of terrorists and with Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Oklahoma, on the government budget.

BWAHAHAHAHA that ONE piece of legislation that was so bi-partisan that is passed with a VOICE VOTE on the floor is the ONE vote they keep pointing to as his record of "reaching across the aisle". BWAHAHAHAHAHA!!! In that case they were ALL on the same side of the isle to start with!

I can't wait to see the vitriol they throw at Palin after she rocks their world tonight.
 

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edvac wrote:
if the protesters out side get in they will all be dead

thats the best republican

never had riots with the democrats why is that

I guess you're too young to remember 1968? Listen to people who know better.....
 
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