-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

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Peace at any cost is a prelude to war!

Dear Brigade,

Here are just a few of the words Americans are using to describe Bush and
Gore:

"...cocky; arrogant; dislike; untrustworthy; wimp; bad; boring; dull;
politician;
dishonest;  incompetent...."

Just more reasons why we say: GO PAT GO!!!!!!!!!!
Linda

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

From:               "Ron Shank" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:                 "Linda Muller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject:            Poll Voters Find Bush 'Arrogant'
Date sent:          Fri, 24 Mar 2000 08:42:22 -0600

Thought you'd enjoy this one, Linda.

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

Poll: Voters Find Bush 'Arrogant'

By GLEN JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- Since wrapping up the GOP presidential nomination,
George W. Bush has been sounding like a sore winner, making acid remarks
about Al Gore and dismissing former Republican rival John McCain. Voters
are starting to tell pollsters the Texas governor is ''cocky'' and
''arrogant.''

With his Texas swagger and a look that some voters describe as a smirk,
the governor's remarks on everything from the election to executions have
renewed questions about whether he's ready for his prime-time presidential
run.

A new Pew Research Center poll suggests Bush is being hurt by it all.

Among people who now support his Democratic rival, Vice President Al
Gore, the percentage who dislike Bush because of his personality has
jumped from 19 percent in October to 33 percent. The figure for Gore among
Bush supporters is 22 percent, compared to 24 percent in October.

And 31 percent of all the poll's respondents chose a negative term when
asked the one word that best described Bush, compared to 12 percent who
thought of a negative term first a year ago.

While the majority of references to Bush were positive, the most frequently
mentioned negative words were ''arrogant,'' ''dislike,'' ''untrustworthy,''
''wimp,''
''bad'' or ''cocky.''

The most frequently mentioned negative word for Gore was ''boring,'' and
''dull'' was second, tied with ''politician,'' undefined as to positive or
negative.
Next on the negative list came ''dishonest'' and ''incompetent.''

Fred Greenstein, a political science professor at Princeton University, said
Bush risks being labeled ''a non gravitas wise guy -- that is something he
has
got to put some effort into working on or walking away from'' if he is to win
in
November.

Perceived arrogance won't necessarily hurt, said Darrell West, professor of
political science at Brown University, ''if it leads people to view you as a
strong and effective leader.''

But Bill Mayer, a political science professor at Northeastern University,
said
that too often Bush's campaign seems to ''show him off in ways that
accentuate the notion that he is not very substantive ... has no great reason
to appear so cocky.''

In an interview published Thursday in The Washington Post, the Texas
governor launched into unsolicited and repeated criticism of the vice
president.

Asked directly whether Gore has the honesty and integrity to serve as
president, Bush replied: ''That's what I'd like to know and that's what
America
would like to know.''

The remarks came a week after Bush got into political hot water by coming
off as dismissive of McCain, his closest rival for the GOP nomination.

In an interview with The New York Times, Bush was asked whether the
Arizona senator had raised his consciousness about reform.

Bush replied, ''No, he didn't change my views.'' Bush also said he had no
intention of making concessions to McCain on campaign finance reform.

While the governor later softened his remarks about McCain, his initial
criticism mimicked remarks from his press secretary, who said when asked
about negotiating a settlement with McCain, ''Negotiations? Governor Bush
won.''

Bush didn't directly address the issue Thursday, but he touched on his
approach to Gore when answering a question about Social Security.

''I know people on the vice president's team don't like me to remind people
that this guy will say anything to get elected, but I'm going to,'' Bush said
at
a news conference held after he spoke to students at Colonial High School
here in central Florida.

''He's the man who said he invented the Internet; he didn't. He's the man who
said during a debate he was responsible for the Earned Income Tax Credit,
yet it was passed two years before his arrival in the U.S. Congress.

''I believe I can keep the tone right, because America wants somebody to
lead the country in the future, but I'm going to keep asking those
questions,''
Bush said.

Explanations aside, Bush's remarks -- and questions about his readiness to
be president -- have been recurring themes on the campaign trail:

-- During a debate on Dec. 6 in Phoenix, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, took a
playful jab at Bush that carried a serious charge: ''I really believe that
you
need more experience before you become president of the United States.
That's why I'm thinking of you as a vice presidential candidate.''

-- In that same debate, questions arose about whether Bush was really
reading, as he had previously stated, a biography of Dean Acheson,
President Truman's secretary of state.

Instead of answering a question about what lessons he had learned from
Acheson, Bush recited sections from the foreign policy section of his stump
speech.

-- During a debate on March 2 in Los Angeles, the governor laughed when
asked about Calvin Jerold Burdine, a Texas death row inmate who had been
ordered freed after 16 years because his lawyer slept through his trial. Bush
said the man's release proved ''the system worked.''

-- In the run-up to the March 7 Super Tuesday voting, Bush started running
TV ads in New York questioning McCain's commitment to fighting breast
cancer. McCain's sister suffered from the disease, and when that was
brought too Bush's attention, he said it was ''all the more reason to
remind''
McCain of his record.

McCain replied: ''I wonder if someone who would treat a situation like that
is
ready for prime time.''

http://www.newsday.com/ap/national/ap958.htm

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