C-C-C-CONDI FOR PRESIDENT?


Say it ain't so. I guess the Red States feel she might be a good foil to Hillary or Obama.

Frankly, no one is standing out to me this election cycle. They all look the same, sound the same, pander to the same interests and bend over for the same ****. There's no one on the horizon at a time when we need true leadership in this country to clean up the mess that the Chimp-in-Charge and his Bananas have left.


Condi isn't dealing with reality. The U.S. won't buy her for the most part. The Jews in the Diaspora I know probably won't be so thrilled about her kissing the derrieres of the terrorists in the Middle East. She needs to develop her own line of shoes or maybe get a boyfriend (or girlfriend, whatever...) and be a real person for a while. And she needs to stop drinking the Neocon Cosmopolitans.

But PRESIDENT CONDI?


(shaking head, walking away in disgust)

Revisiting the possibility of a Rice ticket in 2008

Marcus Mabry, author of Twice as Good: Condoleezza Rice and Her Path to Power, told CFR that "it would be very hard for" U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to "turn down" the chance to run for president or vice president. Mabry, Newsweek magazine's chief of correspondents, says that Republican insiders are already eyeing Rice, particularly as a possible VP candidate.

I mentioned Mabry's book a couple of weeks ago, writing about the relations between President Bush and Rice and comparing them to those of Prime Minister Olmert and Foreign Minister Livni. "The U.S. secretary of state serves the president as long as the president wants him or her; the Israeli minister is an independent creature who can suggest to the prime minister that he resign from his job."

But even more interesting in the context of a possible Rice ticket is her relations with Israel. And in this case, slowly but gradually, Rice is the one now playing the traditional role of state secretary: representing the more hopeful (or naive) party in the administration, the one that's still thinking there's a chance for a breakthrough in the Israeli-Arab peace process. The so-called "benchmarks" suggested by her people - and rejected by Israel - were one form of the recently growing distance between Rice's position and Israel's.

The possibility of a Rice ticket is not a new one. When we started our Israel Factor project Rice was one of the ranked candidates until we dropped her from the list (we thought there were no signs that she was going to run). And she wasn't doing very well - our panel watched her opinions and actions evolve and didn't like it. In mid-January we asked: Why did The Israel Factor panelists downgrade Rice? The answer was complicated, but worth repeating:
"We presented the panel with a series of questions that could explain the drop in their estimation [of Rice] and we asked them to reply with a number from 1 to 5 (1 shows that the issue had no influence and 5 shows that it had a great deal of influence on the change in the grade). Various panelists gave different answers about what's bothering them, so there is no alternative but to assume that Rice is just a miserable victim of circumstances. The panelists who are worried by the possibility of American pressure on the Palestinian issue lowered her grade because they believe that some of her statements show she is over-committed to the establishment of a Palestinian state. Others, who really have no diplomatic problem with Rice or with a certain amount of American pressure, lowered her grade because their estimation of President Bush is very low and her loyalty to his policy causes them to doubt her intelligence."
What would have happened had we kept Rice on the list? I called two of the panelists today and asked them this question (they do not necessarily represent the views of the other panelists) and the reply I got didn't surprise me: they don?t think her ranking would have changed for the better- probably the opposite is true.

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Comments

Anonymous said…
Keep your eyeballs peeled on this guy, Congressman Ron Paul, Tx, Barb. He's got it going on.

Ron Paul has stepped up to the plate!

*Hugs from the Left Coast
Barbara said…
A lot of people are making fun of Ron Paul as this years Ross Perot.

Frankly, I am glad he called Guiliani out about the 9/11 stuff. As a NYer I am getting sick of hearing what a great guy Guiliani was during 9/11. I actually had the opportunity to work in the law firm Guiliani was at for about 2 years prior to his being mayor. I even did a little work for him and he was a friendly, decent person. However, I think his political aspirations have turned him into the same sort of panderer that Hillary's have.

Ron Paul may not have a snowball's chance in hell against the Hillary or Obama juggernauts - but I appreciated his forthrightness and speaking truth to power.
Anonymous said…
Rudy Giuliani will be your nominee, and Condi will be the VP choice. Rice, thankfully, is having nothing to do with the hideously incompetent government of Ehud Olmert, and is standing by for Bibi, as are we all.

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