The Thoughts of an Educated Young African American Male

Fair and Balanced, Not Fox News

Read this story (abot republican legislators telling Bush he has no credibility in regards to the Iraq war) here because Fox News is busy relying on their fallback news, i.e.,

Hannity = Boarder control and Al Sharpton

O’Reilly = Chasing District Attorneys about prosecutorial decisions,

Gretta = pop culture legal news,

Fox & Friends = being goofy, talking over each other, and avoiding any issue they don’t care for.

It’s amazing they say fair and balanced when they won’t report any news they don’t like. They are no better than the “mainsteam media” they complain about every day.

Anyway, on to the news Fox is scared to discuss.

NEW YORK TIMES By CARL HULSE and JEFF ZELENY

Moderate Republicans gave President Bush a blunt warning on his Iraq policy at a private White House meeting this week, telling the president that conditions needed to improve markedly by fall or more Republicans would desert him on the war.

The White House session demonstrated the grave unease many Republicans are feeling about the war, even as they continue to stand with the president against Democratic efforts to force a withdrawal of forces through a spending measure that has been a flash point for weeks.

Participants in the Tuesday meeting between Mr. Bush, senior administration officials and 11 members of a moderate bloc of House Republicans said the lawmakers were unusually candid with the president, telling him that public support for the war was crumbling in their swing districts.

One told Mr. Bush that voters back home favored a withdrawal even if it meant the war was judged a loss. Representative Tom Davis told Mr. Bush that the president’s approval rating was at 5 percent in one section of his northern Virginia district.

“It was a tough meeting in terms of people being as frank as they possibly could about their districts and their feelings about where the American people are on the war,” said Representative Ray LaHood of Illinois, who took part in the session, which lasted more than an hour in the residential section of the White House. “It was a no-holds-barred meeting.”

Several of the Republican moderates who visited the White House have already come under political attack at home for their support of Mr. Bush and survived serious Democratic challenges in November.

Representative Charles W. Dent of Pennsylvania, a co-chairman of the Tuesday Group, an alliance of about 30 moderate Republican lawmakers, helped arrange the meeting. He said lawmakers wanted to convey the frustration and impatience with the war they are hearing from voters. “We had a very frank conversation about the situation in Iraq,” he said. Even so, the Republicans who attended the White House session indicated that they would maintain solidarity with Mr. Bush for now by opposing the latest Democratic proposal for two-stage financing of war, which is scheduled for a vote on Thursday in the House.

Lawmakers said Mr. Bush made no commitments, but seemed grateful for their support and said a precipitous withdrawal from Iraq could cause the sort of chaos that occurred in Southeast Asia after Americans left Vietnam. The lawmakers said that Mr. Bush and others at the meeting — including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, the political adviser Karl Rove and National Security Adviser Stephen J. Hadley — appeared to appreciate the political reality facing Republicans who will be on the ballot next year.

“It was very healthy,” said Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, the House Republican leader, who attended but let the moderates do most of the talking

May 11, 2007 Posted by | Al Sharpton, Bush, fair and balanced, Fox and Friends, fox news, Gretta, Hannity, mainstream media, Moderate Republicans, New York Times, O'Reilly, President, republicans, war, War in Iraq | 2 Comments