[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Obama Wars Title: Harry Reid Furious with McCain Harry Reid Furious with McCain Tuesday, 26 Jan 2010 01:35 PM Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he has been shocked by the behavior of John McCain since he returned to the Senate from his failed White House bid. My disappointment no, thats the wrong word; Ill try to find a better word. My amazement has been John McCain, Reid angrily declared. I thought hed turn out to be a statesman, work for things. Hes against everything. Hes against everything! He didnt used to be against everything. Reids fury at McCain was revealed in an eye-opening article in The New York Times Magazine on Sunday, written by Adam Nagourney, chief national political correspondent for The Times. Reid might strike some as a soft-spoken, amiable gentleman from a small Western town (Searchlight, Nev., population 798). But in his article titled Harry Reid Is Complicated, Nagourney presents the 70-year-old Democrat as anything but likeable, a blunt-talking politicians whose animosities go far beyond McCain. Among Nagourneys disclosures: * Reid has a thing about fat people, manifested in asides to aides who seem to be getting portly and an office staff that is suspiciously thin. When George W. Bush invited Reid for coffee in the Oval Office in the last weeks of his presidency, Bushs dog walked in and Reid told the president: Your dog is fat. * Reid readily admits that he called Bush a liar twice, and referred to him as a loser in front of a high school civics class. * Reid called angry protesters at town-hall meetings evilmongers, and said he has no regrets for referring to former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan as a political hack. * When independent Democrat Joe Lieberman said he would not support the healthcare reform bill that Reid was trying to pass in the Senate, Reid told associates: He double-crossed me. Lieberman disputes that he misled Reid. * Reid demonstrated an apparent aversion to black people in comments he made about then-presidential candidate Barack Obama. He was quoted in a new book as saying that Obama could become Americas first black president because he was light skinned and had no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one. Reid apologized to President Obama for the remarks. Reid has an almost pathological propensity to say things that get him in trouble, Nagourney observed. The Majority Leaders missteps have not been lost on Nevada voters the Senates most powerful Democrat, who is up for re-election in November, is trailing his possible opponents badly in the polls. A Rasmussen Report survey in mid-January found Reid earning just 36 percent of the vote against either of two top Republican challengers down seven percentage points from a month earlier. Sue Lowden, former chairman of the Nevada GOP, drew 48 percent against Reid, and businessman Danny Tarkanian picked up 50 percent. The poll also showed Reid trailing a third Republican contender, former Assemblywoman Sharron Angle, by four percentage points. Rasmussen found that 47 percent of respondents have a very unfavorable opinion of Reid, and a survey by The Las Vegas Review-Journal disclosed that 52 percent of Nevadans view Reid unfavorably. A more recent poll by Daily Kos/Research 2000 showed Reid trailing Tarkanian by 11 percentage points, and Lowden by nine.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: All (#0)
Two angry, wealthy, bitter old men arguing (Reid and McCain). That said, its going to be enjoyable watching dingy Harry get 'Daschled' this November.
Still pretending Long Island is Manhattan? (laughing)
|
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|