You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
Pelosi: "GOP Leadership A Freak Show"
2006-11-05
Hattip Drudge Report
(11-05) 04:00 PST Glenside, Pa. -- House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi warned that a Republican victory Tuesday would prolong the U.S. involvement in Iraq another 10 years, as she embarked on a final push in a campaign that could make her speaker.

In an interview from her Capitol office, Pelosi characterized Tuesday's vote as a referendum on the war, shrugged off President Bush's efforts to make her liberalism a national issue, described the current GOP leadership as a "freak show," and expressed confidence about her party's prospects to pick up the 15 seats it needs for a majority. "I know where the numbers are in these races, and I know that they are there for the 15; today (it's) 22 to 26," Pelosi said Friday.

Pelosi cautioned that the number of Democratic House victories could be higher or lower and said her greatest concern is over the integrity of the count -- from the reliability of electronic voting machines to her worries that Republicans will try to manipulate the outcome. "That is the only variable in this," Pelosi said. "Will we have an honest count?''
Well, there it is - I hear the lawyers are already lined up on all sides for the inevitable court challenges.
In a final effort to motivate loyalists, Pelosi raced through three districts in the Philadelphia suburbs Saturday, where polls show Democratic challengers running even, if not slightly ahead. "When you're thinking about how many calls to make, how many precincts to walk, how many friends to reach out to, just think of the difference that a new direction will make,'' Pelosi told nearly 1,000 enthusiastic Democrats at a rally here for Patrick Murphy, who is running even in his contest against Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick.

The importance of the Philadelphia suburbs to the Democrats' chances was reinforced by the presence of Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, former Vice President Al Gore and Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell at the Saturday rallies.

Pelosi plans to stump today for Democratic candidates in Connecticut before returning to Washington to await election returns.

Sporting a red, white and blue scarf embroidered with Democratic asses donkeys, Pelosi focused her public comments on the Democrats' domestic plans, should they win, for the first 100 legislative hours (raise the minimum wage, cut interest rates on student loans, roll back subsidies to oil companies, boost stem cell research, strengthen homeland security).

Yet during the interview, she asserted that discontent over the war is the No. 1 issue driving the election. "This election is about Iraq,'' said Pelosi, a consistent war opponent who has said her failure to prevent the United States from going to war in 2003 is her greatest disappointment in public life.

"If indeed it turns out the way that people expect it to turn out, the American people will have spoken, and they will have rejected the course of action the president is on."

If they win, Democrats will immediately reach out to Bush to find a bipartisan way to begin redeploying troops "outside of Iraq," Pelosi said. They will also apply pressure to disarm the militias, amend the Iraqi constitution and engage in diplomacy in the region.
Redeployment=cut & run, of course
They haven't bothered yet to tell us what their plan is. I guess we're supposed to trust them.
"A Democratic victory would be in furtherance of reaching that goal. Absent a Democratic victory, we'll be there for the next 10 years,'' Pelosi said.

Acknowledging that Bush has previously rejected suggestions for scaling back U.S. involvement, Pelosi said a victory Tuesday would give "Democrats in Congress a great deal more leverage in the conversation with the president."
And we can impeach him too!
Pelosi downplayed expectations that a report by former Republican Secretary of State James Baker and former Democratic Rep. Lee Hamilton -- expected to be made public shortly after the election -- will call for a significant change of course and provide Bush an opportunity to change directions. "It's hard to imagine any group headed by Secretary Baker, whom I respect personally but who is so close to the Bush administration, will come up with any proposal that is any different than what the president is proposing," Pelosi said.
ie There's not a Republican on the planet that we would trust to have a good idea.
Bush has also been portraying the stakes in Iraq in increasingly stark terms as the election approaches, asserting that a Democratic victory would amount to "cutting and running," and that leaving Iraq would provide the terrorists a foothold from which they would pose a threat to the United States for another generation. He has also increasingly used Pelosi as a foil, mocking her comment that Democrats "love tax cuts" and telling crowds that she must be a secret admirer.

Asked whether she takes offense at Bush's characterization of her, Pelosi grimaced. "No. No. He knows I don't mind. Why would I mind if the president of the United States, whom I have called incompetent, would try to undermine me?

"It just goes to show you, though, how bankrupt the Republicans are of ideas," Pelosi said. "This election is about the president of the United States; it's not about me. But it's interesting they've made the president of the United States the political hit man, and now he's making personal attacks, not only on me, but on the city I proudly represent."
I wasn't aware the President was up for election this year, Nancy? I also thought you and every other dhimmi around was saying that this election was about Iraq? So, which is it?
She said the attacks have not been effective because half the country has never heard of her, but added: "I think they'll know who the speaker of the House is if we win."
Be afraid. Be very afraid.
The refrain of "San Francisco values" ...
Be even more afraid.
... has been used in campaigns across the country to tie more conservative Democrats to the liberal politics of Pelosi and the city, in what many view as a not-so-subtle reference to the city's embrace of diversity.

Pelosi said she welcomed the attention. "Any focus on San Francisco is wonderful for us. San Francisco is a city which insures all of our children ... it is a city that has been a hotbed of activity, whether it's entrepreneurial spirit and the technological world, whether it's protecting the environment, (or) protecting individual rights. It is the city of St. Francis. ... So I hope they will pay attention to San Francisco."
A hot bed of activity is right - a hotbed of treason, corruption, crime, election fraud, open sedition, illegal immigration, and too many other things that shouldn't be talked about in a family forum.
Pelosi called the attacks a reflection of GOP desperation as election day approaches.

She said her pledge to restore civility to the House, open up the rules for debate, and permit the minority party to participate will be a radical departure from the status quo. "We're going to take back the country for the American people -- Democrats and Republicans alike -- because it has been held hostage by the radical right wing of the Republican Party," Pelosi said.
Uh, Nancy, old girl - most of the country is in pretty good shape right now. We don't want you to take it back for us. Some of us don;t think we're being held hostage - and would not stand to be held hostage - by what you dhimmies call the "radical right wing of the Republican Party.
"This is a freak show, and it has to come to an end," Pelosi said. "This is about a Congress and White House whose purpose is to concentrate wealth into the top 1 percent of our country at the expense of the middle class."
From my point of view the freaks are mostly on the other side - same side as you, Nance. Why, there's J F'n Kerry, Joe Biden, Chuckie Schumer, Sandy Burglar, B J Clinton, Jimmah Carter, Nancy Pelo...uh, well, you get the picture, I'm sure.
If Democrats win, and Speaker Dennis Hastert is forced to hand the gavel to Pelosi, "I'll receive it, in my view, from the hands of special interests on behalf of America's future."
Posted by:FOTSGreg

#11  Your business practice, crypto facism, and lack of a plan is a "freak show" Senator. I hold very little if any respect for democrats. As I see it, you are so desperate for power you would throw your Grandmother under a bus for a vote - lest the entire country of America.
Posted by: closedanger@hotmail.com   2006-11-05 23:33  

#10  W will work w/them, that's what he does, prepare for open borders.

He won't veto them, and even if he did, there's enough traitors in the house to pass it.
Posted by: anonymous2u   2006-11-05 23:30  

#9  "It is the city of St. Francis. ..."

Who would chastise a vast majority of your electorate, that being atheist homosexual occupants.
Posted by: OldSpook   2006-11-05 22:26  

#8  Pelosi is in the House, not the Senate.

Doh! Doh! Doh!

I think that pink outfit disrupts my neural processors. I should sue.
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2006-11-05 21:29  

#7  Angie:
Pelosi is in the House, not the Senate.
Boxer is in the Senate.

I know: all harpies look alike.
Posted by: Diebold   2006-11-05 20:45  

#6  I'm feeling really up right now. Pew and other polls are showing that the gap is closing. I predicted awhile ago that we will know that the polls were lying if they (again) shift in momentum towards the republicans in the last few days.

The pollsters don't want to look too foolish after the races are done, so they hype, hype, hype while everyone is deciding and then to prevent humiliation, the pollsters close the gap in the last few days before the election.
I still think it's too soon to dance in the streets - like the people of baghdad were feeling yesterday before the verdict I know it could be a bad result, but I'm feeling hopeful :-)
Posted by: anon   2006-11-05 20:19  

#5  "San Francisco is a city which insures all of our children ... "

Uh, Nan..............

Yours is the most childless city in North America.

No matter how your comment is interpreted, it just doesn't work.
Posted by: no mo uro   2006-11-05 19:55  

#4  I wasn't aware the President was up for election this year, Nancy?

Neither is John Kerry, but I got anti-Kerry campaign literature yesterday. (Seems the Democrat candidate for Texas Gov is a known Kerry-cuddler! Aieee!)

...on the city I proudly represent.

Hey! How did San Francisco get a whole Senator? That's not fair!
Posted by: Angie Schultz   2006-11-05 19:14  

#3  Freak show? Well, sweetie, you should know.
Posted by: Sgt. Mom   2006-11-05 17:49  

#2  Last time, Grandma San Fran Nan said she'd receive the gavel for the children. Barnum and Bailey could sell tickets to her unreal demogog freakshow...good grief.
Posted by: Phineter Thraviger1073   2006-11-05 16:27  

#1  Even if they win (and I don't believe they will), they still won't be able to override GWB's veto.
Posted by: Darrell   2006-11-05 16:19  

00:00