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What does it take to get fired by Republicans?

TOVisitor

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The only known firing offense is talking about Karl Rove.

Lawyer Is Fired After Talking About Rove
Sun Sep 11, 7:12 AM ET


AUSTIN, Texas - A lawyer with the Texas secretary of state was fired after she spoke to a reporter about presidential adviser Karl Rove's eligibility to vote in the state.

Elizabeth Reyes, 30, said she was dismissed last week for violating the agency's media policy after she was quoted in a Sept. 3 story by The Washington Post about tax deductions on Rove's homes in Washington and Texas.

Scott Haywood, a spokesman for Texas Secretary of State Roger Williams, confirmed Reyes' firing but wouldn't discuss specifics. He had earlier told the Post that Reyes "was not authorized to speak on behalf of the agency."

Reyes told the Post on Friday a superior told her that her bosses were upset about the article. Williams has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for Republicans, including President Bush, who relies heavily on Rove for political strategy.

While Reyes said she didn't know she was talking to a reporter, she said the press policy doesn't bar her from speaking with the media.

"The policy allows us to talk to members of the media," she told the Post. "The policy says if it's a controversial issue or a special issue, it needs to be forwarded on to someone else. Just talking to the media doesn't violate it, as I read it. ... Karl Rove didn't come up. It wasn't something you could classify as controversial."

She said she sent a certified letter to Williams's office asking that her dismissal be reconsidered.

The Post earlier reported that Rove inadvertently received a homestead tax deduction on his home in Washington, even though he had not been eligible for the benefit for more than three years. Rove was eligible for the deduction when he bought the home in 2001, but a change in the tax law in 2002 made the deduction available only to property owners who do not vote elsewhere. Rove is registered to vote in Texas.

The tax office admitted the mistake, saying it failed to rescind the deduction, and Rove agreed to reimburse the city an estimated $3,400 in back taxes, the Post reported.

Rove is registered to vote in Kerr County, Texas, where he and his wife own two rental homes that he claims as his residence. But two local residents told the Post they had never seen Rove there.

The Post reported Saturday that when its reporter called the Texas secretary of state's office for her story, she was told the press officer was on vacation and she was transferred to Reyes.

The attorney told the reporter that it was potential vote fraud in Texas to register in a place where you don't actually live, and she was quoted as saying Rove's cottages don't "sound like a residence to me, because it's not a fixed place of habitation."

Another case of IOKIYAR ?
 

WoodPeckr

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GOP Motto: "Loyalty Uber Alles"

Remember Loyalty comes first to GOPers!

Like the Mafia, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, etc., loyalty is always the prime concern, even over truth & Law!

If you violate and show any disloyalty you are history!
 

TOVisitor

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BiggieE said:
...tell that to the Clinton White House travel office....
Oh snap. Boy, you are really great with the one-liners about Clinton.

Glad to have another of your ilk aboard -- and I am looking forward to using you as yet another punching bag.
 

TOVisitor

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Another rat leaves the sinking ship ...

Bush's Katrina dawdling should offend conservatives
By Nolan Finley / The Detroit News
Nolan Finley


It was suggested last week that I turn in my conservative credentials because I thought Michael Brown ought to be fired for the way he bungled the initial response to the Hurricane Katrina disaster.

If hanging on to those credentials means I have to blindly defend everything President Bush does, then, fine, I'll give them up. That's a bigger job than I want.

If being conservative means I have to turn a blind eye to government mismanagement and incompetence just because a Republican is running the show, then I'll take a hike.

Brown, director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, screwed up the response to the New Orleans tragedy. He caught a bad case of the slows. His dawdling and the ineptitude of local and state officials cost lives. Friday, Bush yanked him back to Washington, but the damage was done.

It ought to be OK for conservatives to say that. But the conservative movement's principles have given way to partisanship. The words "conservative" and "Republican" are now interchangeable, and it's more important to protect the party than to hew to core values.

One of those principles for conservatives is that government ought to be as efficient and responsive to customers as private business. What private business would excuse the level of indecisiveness Brown displayed to blind-side the chief executive?

Brown allowed the Katrina mess to bite the boss in the backside, and that's unpardonable. But Bush's initial response was to do what he always does -- stubbornly stand by his man. Loyalty is a terrific quality. But loyalty to incompetence is inexcusable.

Republicans ought to think twice this time before falling in line behind the president in defense of the Katrina response.


The country watched firsthand the images of the suffering people of New Orleans waiting, waiting, waiting for help. Excuse-making and blame-spreading won't mitigate the damage done to Bush, but it will increase the likelihood of the taint covering everyone else in the party.

Bush claims to be a buck-stops-here guy. He can't be that and continue to dodge responsibility for the screw-ups of his administration.

The failure of leadership following Katrina could well cost Republicans the Congress in 2006. Those in the GOP who will face voters next year must be careful about circling the wagons in defense of the president, lest it cost them their seats when the true scope of the Katrina mismanagement unfolds.

Bush will try to spend himself out of this mess, burying the Gulf Coast in federal dollars in hopes the cash will make people forget that while he dawdled, people died.

The fine fiscal conservatives in Washington will rubber-stamp every funding request, without regard that their previous five years of unholy spending has maxed out the nation's credit card, leaving nothing for emergencies.

So forgive me for breaking rank. But I don't see anything particularly conservative in the bumbling going on in Washington. If that's what conservative looks like, count me out.
 

WoodPeckr

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Nolan Finley comes across as one of the few fine conservatives that still has morals, real principles and someone you can respect, unlike those "crazed", "pro-war", "lickspittles" of the president, an apt term George Galloway coined for those chickenhawks and lapdogs who support team W no matter how deep they wade into the 'Bush-manure' because loyalty to 'W' trumps ethics and Law.
 

TOVisitor

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This is hilarious (and very sad)

From: http://patriotboy.blogspot.com/

Jesus General gives us the lowdown on the Regional FEMA Directors.

Monday, September 12, 2005

Meet your local FEMA Director

The federal government's response to the Hurricane Katrina disaster stands as a testament to Our Leader's ability to pick the right people for the vitally important job of blaming Democrats for the Administration's failures.

Certainly, Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff and FEMA Director Mike Brown proved that they're up to that most important of tasks, but what about their deputies who head FEMA's regional offices?

Do they have the political communication skills they'll need in time of crisis. Or are they simply Clinton Era holdovers, appointed by the enemy to use their emergency management expertise to thwart Our Leader's budget priorities?

Fortunately, the former seems to be the case. As you will learn from the short bios I've posted below, most of FEMA's regional directors are political creatures whose decisions will never be corrupted by emergency management concerns.

John Pennington
FEMA Region X (AK, ID, OR and WA)

Appointed by Our Leader in 2001, Pennington holds a degree in business from Diploma Mill University and gained his emergency management experience by allegedly beating his wife and by passing bills for the Building Industry Association of Washington in the state legislature.

David I. Maurstad
FEMA Region VII (CO, MT, ND, SD, UT and WY)

Maurstad learned everything he knows about emergency management from serving as a state legislator, a school board director, a mayor, and as Nebraska's Lt. Governor. His greatest accomplishment as Lt. Gov was the creation of "a program to recognize young people from across Nebraska for their achievements and personal courage'

Karen E. Armes
FEMA Region IX (AZ, CA, HI, NV,and the brown people islands)

Although I don't like to see women working outside of the home, Miss Armes' degree in recreation administration and accounting experience give me confidence that Our Leader made a wise choice.

Gary Jones
Region VI (AR, LA, NM, OK and TX)

Jones' response to Hurricane Katrina speaks for itself.

Vacant since 10/04
Region IV (AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, SC and TN)

Why waste money on regional directors for hurricane-prone states when Pat Robertson can blame their disasters on homosexuals?

Vacant since 2/05
Region IV (IL, IN, MI, MN, OH and WI)

The money for the the Iraq Phase of the Eternal Struggle to Resubjugate Brown People has to come from somewhere.
 
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