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November 30, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-30-07

342 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

House Democrats continue to play games…take two weeks off…pass an unacceptable, politically motivated tax shift..and then try to blame Republicans…as they walk away from their jobs.

Let’s be clear…the Democrat Governor and the Democrats in the legislature passed the largest tax increase in Michigan’s history.  The Democrats pushed through these tax increases that included the dreaded sales tax on services…which is a disaster by anyone’s analysis.

Now the Democrats are trying to weasel out of their disastrous public policy…blame Republicans and once again, punish job providers in Michigan.

I hope our weak kneed business community (not all of you) realize who has created this mess, pushed for this mess and now are trying to take credit for fixing this mess.

Democrats raised taxes…Democrats continue to waste taxpayer dollars…Democrats refuse to implement fundamental structural reforms to fix these long term problems.

Spin it anyway you want…the Democrats control this process and too many of our “friends” are willing to accept “amputation” versus “death”…not much of a choice…but it’s amazing how many job providers are saying “thanks” and encouraging this bad public policy.

My biggest frustration…these folks will once again support the same Democrats that messed up Michigan…with some perverse logic that accepts various levels of incompetence and arrogance.

The Governor appoints a new “COO”….we need a new “CEO”.  So somehow calling someone a “COO” instead of “Chief of Staff” is going to make a difference?…please!

There is a crisis in leadership…maybe some “First Gentleman” can offer a “course” in leadership?!?

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-30-07" »

November 29, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-29-07

343 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

More Games….House Democrats passed a “take it or leave” it repeal/replacement of the sales tax on services and then adjourned…while the Democrat Chair of the House Tax Committee , Rep. Bieda said they were still negotiating.

Speaker Andy Dillon and the House Democrats continue to act irresponsibly…passing the largest tax hike in Michigan’s history…jamming through a disastrous sales tax on services and then once again trying to blackmail fiscally conservative legislators into more revenues….

NO reforms.

NO cuts.

NO grip on reality…just more taxes and wasteful spending from the Democrats.

Michigan…are you listening?  Are we paying attention?  This is an embarrassment!

January 15th primary is a GO!  Period.  Both parties have voted to participate and use the 15th as their primary for the purpose of ultimately electing delegates to the national convention.

Michigan will follow Iowa and New Hampshire and is truly a bellweather state…if you can win in Michigan, you can win anywhere…if you boycott Michigan…voters will remember.

The Democrats will be on the ballot…Hillary Clinton leading the pack…but John Edwards and Barack Obama gave into a blackmail effort by NH and IA Democrats….and I hope Michigan Democrats and voters in general remember that.  They are running for President of the United States, which includes Michigan, not just Iowa and New Hampshire.

There was an effort to put all the Democrats on the ballot, but gamesmanship on the part of the Democrats, particularly Senator Schauer and Speaker Dillon killed their chance as they ran out of time.  They have no one to blame but themselves.

January 15th Presidential Primary information and dates:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/primary-and-con.html

YouTube debate tonight showed why Republicans are ready to lead America.  A great debate with some great moments.  There is no question any Republican would be better than anything Hillary Clinton has to offer.

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

-  House Republican Leader Craig DeRoche today issued the following statement strongly criticizing the House Democrat plan to eliminate the service tax:

“Tonight we’ve seen yet another half-baked tax increase passed late at night with no public input that will hurt the economy. How many times are the Democrats going to play with Michigan jobs like this?

This isn’t a game of chicken – the economy will greatly suffer under this plan. Trading one bad plan for the next is not governing. When 97 percent of businesses in the state think the Legislature is failing, something is obviously wrong.

This mess was created by the Democrats, who just dug the hole deeper. The manner in which it passed the House shows either their intent to have the service tax take effect or their lack of knowledge in House procedure.

This is a disrespectful display of politicking at the expense of Michigan businesses and taxpayers. Governing does not happen by refusing to compromise or ignoring reality.”

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-29-07" »

November 28, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-28-07

MORNING UPDATE:

January 15th primary settled…AV applications have been mailed,  ballots are being printed…let the games begin!

Republicans are negotiating for a second debate…discussions are on their way with two major networks to hold a debate following the Iowa and New Hampshire primaries.  Keep your fingers crossed!

The Democrats foiled a last minute attempt to insure all their candidates would be on the ballot.  Senator Clinton is the only major candidate on the Michigan ballot, now the question is will the Obama and Edwards people play in the Democrat primary to embarrass Hillary?

Michigan Democrats Executive Committee then voted last night to go with the January 15th primary as is.  So we’ll all make the best of what we have…boy are the Dems screwed up!

January 15th Presidential Primary information and dates:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/primary-and-con.html

House Democrats continue their strong arm tactics that don’t allow Republican members of the House to see bills before the language is voted on, don’t allow members to speak and have run roughshot over  ELECTED members of the House of Representatives.  This is outrageous.

The House Democrats are abusing the system and something has to be done.

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

- Earlier this month, Michigan Senate Republicans passed legislation – similar to primary statutes in other states – that would place all presidential candidates on the Jan. 15 primary ballot. Yesterday, however, state House Democrats continued to play political games with the legislation, adding poison-pill amendments that killed any chance to restore all the Democrat candidates to the primary ballot.

I lay blame for the legislative impasse squarely at the feet of supporters of John Edwards and Michigan Democrat Party Chairman Mark Brewer.

Mark Brewer, David Bonior and the entire Edwards for President Campaign have been working for months to scuttle Michigan’s presidential primary, working in open opposition to Governor Granholm and the large majority Michigan Democrats who joined Republicans in supporting a Jan. 15 primary. Republicans are not going to risk Michigan’s opportunity to play a major role in selecting the next president of the United States just so Democrats can check items off their extremist political agenda. Fortunately, Michigan’s Supreme Court made it unequivocally clear that the Jan. 15 presidential primary will go as scheduled. The only thing the Democrats have done is chosen to score political points by disenfranchising their own voters. Having all the Democrats’ candidates on the ballot with all the Republicans would have made it a bigger 'win' for Michigan.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-28-07" »

November 27, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-27-07

345 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

House Democrats played games with presidential primary ‘fix’ bill yesterday that are NOT acceptable to Republicans.  For over three weeks the Democrats have put local clerks, campaigns and our primary in a constant flux.  We have a primary set for January 15 and we are NOT willing to risk all our efforts while House Democrats continue to play political games.  They blew another chance yesterday.

Let’s move forward and make our January 15 primary work!

I ended the legislative day in Clare as the guest of honor at Representative Tim Moore’s fundraiser.  Local Republicans gathered to talk politics, break bread and get ready for 2008.

The Wall Street Journal yesterday reported: “ Iowa and New Hampshire are often said to be the launching pads for successful presidential nominees. This year Michigan may rival them in importance.”

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/wsj-michigan-ma.html

January 15th Presidential Primary information and dates:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/primary-and-con.html

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-27-07" »

November 26, 2007

WSJ: "Michigan may rival them in importance"

http://www.opinionjournal.com/diary/?id=110010907

The Wolverine Primary
Michigan's early vote is good news for George Romney's son and Bill Clinton's wife.
The Wall Street Journal
Opinion Journal
John Fund
Monday, November 26, 2007 12:01 a.m. EST

What if we look back on the 2008 presidential nomination contests and conclude one or both were effectively decided by a single vote--and among a group of judges at that?

Democratic partisans still argue that the 2000 presidential contest was decided by a single vote in the U.S. Supreme Court, even though media recounts of Florida ballots showed that the outcome would not have been changed if Bush v. Gore had gone the other way. But there's no doubt that a 4-3 ruling by the Michigan Supreme Court last Wednesday saved that state's Jan. 15 presidential primary, which was in danger of being scrapped over a dispute about whether it adhered to the state constitution. The winners are likely to be Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton

Mr. Romney pushed hard for an early primary because he has a natural advantage in Michigan. He was born in Detroit, and elderly voters still fondly remember George Romney, his father, who served as governor in the 1960s. Mr. Romney is counting on winning Iowa on Jan. 3--he has more paid workers there than all the other GOP candidates put together--and he plans to use his advantage as a former governor of next-door Massachusetts to win New Hampshire's Jan. 8 primary. Winning Michigan would then give Mr. Romney three straight victories before the critical Jan. 19 South Carolina primary.

Among Democrats, Hillary Clinton is for now the only leading Democratic candidate to appear on Michigan's ballot. The other top-tier contenders withdrew, following the guidance of the Democratic National Committee, which is threatening to take away Michigan's delegates because it is scheduling a primary against the party's rules. But few observers believe the state will actually be stripped of its delegates in the end, so if she remains the only significant name on the ballot, Mrs. Clinton may pick up some momentum, a publicity bounce and some delegates to boot by exerting almost no effort.

Democratic National Committee member Debbie Dingell, wife of Rep. John Dingell, will try to persuade the state Legislature to amend the primary law to restore the names of Barack Obama, John Edwards, Joe Biden and Bill Richardson. But that could be a tough sell given that Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, the state's top elections officer, says the primary is already well behind schedule and any further delay will make it impossible to get absentee ballots out.

John McCain could also benefit from the Michigan primary should he do well enough in New Hampshire to remain viable. Michigan has no party registration, and in 2000 the votes of independents and Democrats helped Mr. McCain crush George W. Bush in Michigan's primary. Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson are less likely to be able to capitalize on the Michigan primary because they have not built large grass-roots organizations in the state. Similarly, Mike Huckabee has not spent any significant time or money in the Wolverine State.

In allowing the primary to go forward, Michigan's high court overturned two rulings that had held that it would be unconstitutional because the two major political parties would have exclusive access to the list of those who voted in the primary. The Supreme Court, using dubious reasoning, said the public's interest in having open primaries as opposed to conventions of party activists outweighed the need to provide equal access to what are clearly public records. It sided with those who wanted publicity for the state over those who wanted public disclosure. (The law setting the primary had a "nonseverability" clause, so that the courts could not order the vote to go forward in compliance with disclosure laws.)
Michigan has now shaken up the primary calendar in a fundamental way. Among Democrats, look for Mrs. Clinton's rivals to work behind the scenes to get their names on the Michigan ballot, whether or not delegates are at stake. Media coverage has become the true currency of politics, and no Democratic opponent of Mrs. Clinton wants to hand her an uncontested victory.

Among Republicans, the pressure will be for Mitt Romney to win Iowa and New Hampshire. He is saturating Iowa with mail and ads and is currently spending $200,000 a week on ads on New Hampshire's ABC affiliate. If he wins both, he will then try for a triple slam with Michigan. Rudy Giuliani, who is trailing badly in Iowa, may now have to focus on winning New Hampshire to avoid giving Mr. Romney a clean sweep in the early states. The pressure on Messrs. McCain and Thompson to poll well somewhere is now more intense.

Iowa and New Hampshire are often said to be the launching pads for successful presidential nominees. This year Michigan may rival them in importance.

http://www.opinionjournal.com/diary/?id=110010907

Articles of Interest 11-26-07

346 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

House Democrats are planning on passing the presidential primary “fix” bill today according to this weekend’s Free Press story.  School elections are set to be held during the “November elections” and the “fix” bill changed this.  November school elections need to be preserved…it saves tax dollars and increases voter’s participation.

January 15th Presidential Primary information and dates:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/primary-and-con.html

Attorney General Mike Cox announced the 4th Annual "Support MI Troops" fundraising drive.  The "Support MI Troops" initiative raises funds to support Michigan soldiers, sailors, and Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan at Doc's Sports Retreat in Livonia on Nov. 28 between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m. 

On-line fundraising for Republicans at Slatecard.com has kicked off.  This is a great venue that I hope you will consider supporting our GOP candidates…we’re behind the Dems here…help Walberg or Casperson…give to Knollenberg or McCotter…check out Michigan targets at:

http://slatecard.com/slatecards/migop

Here is a great article written by David Keene, longtime Chairman of the Conservative Union:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/david-keenes-a.html

Attorney General Mike Cox had an op ed piece published in the Wall Street Journal about the Second Amendment..see the piece below.

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

- Recall efforts start & grow….see UPDATE “Tax Hiker Portraits” by RightMichigan:
 
Robert Dean:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/2/105439/416

Steve Bieda:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/3/10332/0059

Mike Simpson:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/4/92924/1118

Marc Corriveau:   http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/8/93248/2721

Terry Brown:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/10/101539/45

Mary Valentine:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/9/6253/0133

Kate Ebli:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/11/55455/873

Marty Griffin:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/15/94238/961

Kathy Angerer:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/16/14040/296

Aldo Vagnozzi:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/17/103640/75

John Espinoza:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/30/93255/658

Joel Sheltrown:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/10/31/103434/30

Mike Lahti:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/11/6/10250/0225

Kathleen Law:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/11/7/104242/595

Fred Miller:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/11/13/101018/55

Mike Sak:  http://www.rightmichigan.com/story/2007/11/20/112958/68

How does a recall work: http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/how-to-run-a-re.html

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-26-07" »

November 25, 2007

Primary and Convention Dates

TO: GOP Leadership
RE: Important Dates re: Primary and Conventions


Now that the Supreme Court has ruled that the January 15th primary shall move forward, here are some important dates:   

DECEMBER 17, 2007 - Last day to register to vote for Presidential Primary
First time voters, or those that have moved since the previous election and not yet changed their state registration need to do so before December 17th in order to be eligible to vote in the Presidential Primary. www.mi.gov/sos for more information.

JANUARY 3, 2008 - Notification of County Convention Mailed
Thursday, January 3rd - "Call to County Convention" mailed to all precinct delegates.  A copy of the Call to County Conventions MUST ALSO be sent to the State Party.  If a copy of the call is not received by the State Party, the State Chair shall call the convention. Sample materials / info packet will be sent to County Chairs in early December.

JANUARY 15, 2008 - Presidential Primary    
Tuesday, January 15th - this will be a state-run primary with the Democrats. Voters will be asked to pick either a Republican ballot of a Democrat Ballot at their normal polling locations throughout the state.  www.mi.gov/sos for more information.

FEBRUARY 7, 2008 - County Conventions
Thursday, February 7th - 7:30pm.  All county parties are required to hold County Conventions at this date & time. Location determined by county committee. All precinct delegates shall be notified in writing of the convention date, location and time.  "Call to the Convention" mailed by January 3rd.

IMPORTANT***Because of the very short amount of time between the county and state conventions, all materials regarding the state convention (location, parking, lodging, etc) will be mailed to the County Chairs prior to February 1st, for distribution to elected delegates AT THE COUNTY CONVENTIONS. Informational packets will not be mailed directly to convention delegates. 

FEBRUARY 15 & 16, 2008 - State Convention & State Committee Meeting
Friday, February 15th &  Saturday, February 16th - Lansing Center / Lansing Radisson Hotel, Lansing. State Convention will be held for the purposes of electing National Committee delegates, National Committeeman, and National Committeewoman.  District Caucuses will be held Friday night at the Lansing Radisson Hotel and the Lansing Center.  Convention floor proceedings held Saturday AM at the Lansing Center.  More details to be distributed at County Conventions.


Thank you all for your patience as we navigated our way through three years of planning and a few court battles to get to this point! If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact DAWN WADE, Events Coordinator (dwade@migop.org or 517-487-5413).

David Keene's: A Conservative Continuum

A Conservative Continuum.

THE SOVIET Empire had just collapsed and Americans were giddily wondering what might be next. Some were talking of a peace dividend that Democrats might spend on social programs dear to their hearts or Republicans might send back to the taxpayers who had financed the Cold War.

Others, however, were arguing that the world's sole remaining superpower should consider imposing Pax Americana on an unruly world. Even many conservatives who should have known better were beginning to contemplate a far more robust and aggressive foreign policy than they ever had supported before.

It was in this atmosphere that a number of neoconservative intellectuals, led by the pre-Weekly Standard Bill Kristol, began articulating something they called "national greatness conservatism." During this time, I remember attending a small private dinner where Bill argued that with the defeat of the Soviet Empire, the United States "needed" a new crusade to engage our nation's energies and interests, because, as he put it, a nation's "greatness" is measured not by the prosperity of its people, but by its actions on the world stage.

I challenged him, suggesting that while Woodrow Wilson and Colonel House may have thought the Great War was about redrawing the map of Europe and creating a "new world order", those who filed into the trenches fought to defend their nation, homes and families against our enemies' alleged desire to impose their vision on us. We went to war not to make a dangerous world safe for democracy, but to protect our own democracy.

Two decades later, we reluctantly became involved in another global war, when it was clear that events half a world away posed a real threat to us. And many Americans resisted the idea of going to war absent a direct threat to the U.S. homeland; it took the bombing of Pearl Harbor for families to throw themselves into the effort to defeat our enemies. When the war ended, they breathed a sigh of relief and soldiers came home to farm and take their places on our factory floors and in our executive suites. They were eager to marry, have families and return to what they considered important about their country.

During the Cold War, their sons and daughters responded when they believed our values and allies--and therefore our own security--were at risk. They paid for the Cold War without complaint. They went to Korea, Vietnam and most recently Iraq, not to seek glow, or to help establish their country as a hegemon or to remake the world in our own image, but because they felt it was in danger.

I told Kristol that if he thought the young men and women who fought our wars returned home to pine for new foreign crusades or adventures, he was wrong. They came home happy to trade their guns and uniforms for the way of life they believed, not inaccurately, that they had been called to defend.

THE FOUNDERS and their successors believed firmly that the nation they were creating was indeed John Winthrop's shining "City upon a Hill" that Ronald Reagan liked to describe. Others would emulate the freedom and limited government that characterized the new nation. Few of them believed, however, that it would be either proper or prudent to force others to copy the system they had created.

This view began to lose favor with the advent of the Hearst papers in the late 19th century, the aggressiveness of Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, and the emergence of the United States as a world power after World War I. Still, it wasn't until World War II, and the subsequent Cold War, that Americans began to accept the fact that, like it or not, they were going to have to play a permanently active role on the world stage and that this might well entail the use of force even absent a direct attack on us. While virtually all conservatives admired and continue to admire Bob Taft, most today would agree with the late Michigan Senator Arthur Vandenberg's decision after the conclusion of World War II that conservatives and Republicans could no longer afford to remain isolationist in an increasingly dangerous world.

Conservatives accepted this reality with reluctance, but eventually came around to the view that since Soviet communism represented an unprecedented existential threat to everything they valued, it would have to be confronted; no one thought that communists believed in "socialism in one country", but rather that they would seek to remake the entire world in their own image.

This is not to say that conservatives didn't care about the way the Soviet Union and other totalitarian or authoritarian nations treated their own citizens, but that they believed the prime imperative of U.S. foreign and defense policy should be to protect the United States and its interests. They were prepared to condemn the manner in which other nations acted at home and to support rhetorically and materially indigenous groups fighting for their own freedom, but few believed it wise to use American military power in support of others when American interests were not directly and materially involved. They believed that it was often wise to "keep one's powder dry" for the day when U.S. interests were at real risk.

Until very recently, few who called themselves conservatives would have argued, as the so-called neoconservatives do today, that the best way to guarantee our security at home would be to remake the rest of the world in our own image. During the Cold War, even though conservatives were prepared to fight if need be to prevent the Soviet Union from taking over friendly countries, there were few, if any, calls for U.S. military action to liberate either the Soviet Union itself or the nations it had occupied during and after World War II. At the same time, while American conservatives believed in providing aid to this country's allies, few ever accepted the idea that one could effectively counter Soviet expansionism through what is today known as nation-building.

There were and are sound conservative reasons for this view. Conservatives are by nature cautious about government's ability to change the way people live. We don't believe Washington, DC, for example, is capable of telling people in Peoria how to live their lives. It would stand to reason that reordering the way the citizens of Baghdad run theirs would be even more difficult, something that has been proven true in recent years.

Kristol and his "national greatness conservatives" shared the Founders' view of the United States as an ideal to be emulated but were convinced that, as the world's sole remaining superpower, the United States should become what Kristol termed a "benevolent hegemon", prepared to bully those rulers too ignorant or bullheaded to accept the U.S. economic and political model voluntarily.

Neoconservatives argued, in fact, that this nation not only had a moral obligation to do all in its power to spread the benefits of liberal democracy, but that doing so would serve its own national-security interests. "Democracies do not make war upon each other" became almost a neoconservative mantra, adopted after 9/11 by a president who campaigned promising to forgo the ambitious nation-building favored by his predecessor.

In the wake of the terrorist attacks of 2001, many conservatives--along with the president and most Americans--seemed to accept this argument. But the realities confronted since have caused many, like National Review founder William E Buckley, Jr., to revert to a more traditional conservative view of the circumstances that might justify the use of force against actual and prospective enemies.

Thus, many--and perhaps even most--conservatives supported the initial U.S. decision to remove Saddam Hussein because they, like the president and just about everyone else at the time, accepted the intelligence reports on WMD. The need to strike against someone who might attack our regional allies or was working with our enemies was Far more justifiable than an attempt to rebuild Iraq as a quasi-Western democracy.

That was a far more problematic task given the history of the region, the hatreds dividing the secular factions within Iraq and our track record of failure in accomplishing such things. We had parted company with George H. W. Bush's desire to create a New, World Order because it smacked of Wilsonianism. We were quick to condemn what most of us saw as Bill Clinton's foolishness in attempting to transform Somalia and Haiti into liberal democracies at the point of a sword.

Moreover, in the post-invasion controversy over whether Iraq was a prewar threat, many conservatives realized that they shouldn't have relied so heavily on what amounted to guesses about the enemy's armaments and intent to justify a pre-emptive strike.

Pundits and even a few serious analysts like to categorize the differences within the conservative movement as divisions, pitting what they call "paleo-conservatives" like Pat Buchanan against the neoconservatives. In fact, there aren't many pure "paleos" or "neos" within the movement, which may explain why both sides keep attempting to identify with Ronald Reagan.

Reagan was the quintessential Cold War conservative. He was both a nationalist and a believer in the dreams of the Founders. He believed in the U.S. model's superiority and in an ultimate victory over his generation's existential enemy--a triumph made inevitable by the American system's pre-eminence. When he summed up his view of how he would like the Cold War to end by saying simply, "We win; they lose", he was reflecting the feelings of his fellow conservatives. Reagan wasn't interested in "peaceful coexistence" or in managing the decline of U.S. power and prestige, but in restoring U.S. strength and making clear to the world that we believed in ourselves and weren't interested in caving in to political correctness, multinationalism or Soviet power.

But Ronald Reagan was not, to use a term his adversaries liked to toss around, a warmonger. He was idealistic, intractable and optimistic, but he knew where to draw the line. He resorted to military force far less often than many of those who came before him or who have since occupied the Oval Office. He believed, like the Founders, that in the end ideas are more powerful than guns and bombs, and while the United States must be strong enough to resist any enemy and defeat aggression, we should resist the temptation to use our power aggressively.

What's more, he harbored few illusions about the world beyond our shores or our ability, to remake it in our own image. He encouraged those fighting our enemies, but wasn't about to send U.S. forces to places like Angola, Poland, Afghanistan or Nicaragua to assist them. He knew that freedom must be won by those who want it and that democracy can't be force-fed to nations and people who neither understand it nor are prepared to exercise it.

Those who see an extension of Ronald Reagan's policies in the willingness to use American power to create a world in our own image are imagining things. His sympathy for those seeking freedom and his willingness to help them was tempered by his realization that there are things we can and cannot do, as well as things that we should and should not do.

The Reagan Doctrine was not a license for adventurism, but a doctrine based on a cautious idealism that forced policymakers to consider the legitimacy of international action and the potential costs of committing U.S. blood and treasure.

In her posthumously published book Making War to Keep Peace, Jeane Kirkpatrick summarizes the guidance the doctrine provided policymakers. "It did not address the question of U.S. military involvement or involvement of U.S. forces in any particular contest", she wrote, recognizing that reasonable men and women could differ even while accepting the same general framework. She continued, "Policy under the Reagan Doctrine was establisbed by, prudential determination, of the national interest in particular context [emphasis in the original]."

Kirkpatrick also suggests that under Reagan, even when the mere fact was that U.S. involvement might be morally or even legally justifiable, there were times when holding back was the wiser decision, especially after giving weight to "the long term costs and benefits of such action."

After the assault on the Marine barracks in Lebanon, it was questioning the wisdom of U.S. involvement that led Reagan to withdraw our troops rather than dig in. He found no good strategic reason to give our regional enemies inviting U.S. targets. Can one imagine one of today's neoconservative absolutists backing away from any fight anywhere?

The fact is, of course, that there are very few pure isolationists, neoconservatives, realists or idealists running around. What really exists is a sort of continuum, and most of those in each group share many values and goals. Most conservatives backed the Iraqi enterprise at the outset because they believed that a blow to Al-Qaeda and an Iraqi despot believed to be in league with Osama bin Laden would serve our interests. It was, in short, a prudential decision, but they weren't buying into a crusade to create a world in our own image.

Conservatives know that we cannot create a democratic world by snapping our fingers; they also know that sending armies out to convince others by force to adopt our ways won't prove much more effective. I'm not even sure I've met many neoconservatives who really believe we ought to do that.

During the run-up to the Clinton Administration's decision to go into the Balkans, I remember Charles Krauthammer saying that while he believed we should act as an international policeman, every cop knows there are some neighborhoods he ought to avoid. Although Richard Perle argued that we should use force to "inject" democracy into the Middle East, he doesn't see any need to do the same in Zimbabwe.

My point is that there is a bit of the neocon and the realist in all of us.

The hard choices one is confronted with in the real world make it difficult to say in the abstract when the use of force is and is not justifiable. Given the historically fractious nature of the Balkans, Krauthammer was wondering whether we were going to accomplish much at a reasonable cost by going in when our direct interests weren't threatened; Perle was consciously or unconsciously reflecting on the extent to which our national interests would be at stake in Iraq as compared to Zimbabwe.

Although Jeane Kirkpatrick was eulogized after her death as the "queen" of neoconservatives, she shared the traditional conservative doubt that democracy can either cure all ills or that its spread should be the prime imperative of U.S. foreign policy. After all, she came to Ronald Reagan's attention arguing that the magnitude of the threat we faced from the communist world in the 1970s and 1980s justified alliances with authoritarian as well as Jeffersonian states. In her final years, she took exception to the neoconservative impulse to make democracy promotion, rather than our national-security interests, the rationale for our use of military force in the Middle East.

Kirkpatrick argued that U.S. foreign policy should be based first on the protection of this nation's security and economic interests, and secondarily on promoting free institutions at a reasonable cost, without jeopardizing our primary objective. She may have been a neoconservative in some ways, but she was also a realist. In that sense, she was much like the president who recruited her to public service.

Kirkpatrick was profoundly troubled by the Bush Administration's decision to invade Iraq, although she had wholeheartedly supported the decision to send U.S. troops into Afghanistan. She didn't believe for a minute that it would be possible to create a democracy in Iraq because the nation lacked the prerequisites. She also felt that the fall of Saddam Hussein would not produce leaders willing to undertake the hard work involved in preparing their country for democracy. She knew that had George W. Bush subjected his decision to go into Iraq to the Reagan Doctrine's criteria, it would have come up short.

Ronald Reagan was a believer in freedom and democracy and, at a moral level, never hesitated to align himself with those here and abroad who shared his beliefs. But he never opted for military force when alternatives were available.

Kirkpatrick, as Reagan's UN ambassador and in her retirement, was perhaps the one person who understood and best articulated his approach to foreign policy. Her book strikes me as a must-read for anyone with even a passing interest in understanding the shape of a conservative foreign policy in the modern world.

Conservatives believe today, as they have in the past, in a strong America prepared to fight when necessary, to protect its just interests, but they don't believe it wise or moral to shed the blood of their sons and daughters to impose our views on others. Their belief in American exceptionalism is deep, but most do not see the wisdom or practicality of forcing the rest of the world to accept U.S. values. They harbor a profound belief in morality and human rights, but do not under most circumstances believe American blood should be shed because of the way other nations treat their citizens.

They aren't isolationists, but U.S. nationalists who believe strongly not only in the values articulated by the Founders, but in the need to safeguard the moral and geographic integrity of the nation in which those values have flourished. They are therefore rightly skeptical of multinational agreements that might undermine the sovereignty they consider so central to the successful defense of the country. They believe, like Reagan and the Founders, that ours is a nation that must survive and prosper not only for the benefit of those lucky enough to have been born or moved here, but as an example others might emulate.

As a young conservative, I--like many of my contemporaries--read and digested the wisdom of William Graham Sumner's The Conquest of the United States by Spain, an anti-imperialist, anti-war tract penned as we careened down the road to the Spanish-American War. His point was a simple one. He asked what benefit there would be if in defeating our enemies we became little better than they. It is a question conservatives have asked time and again as we've conducted wars abroad and prepared for them at home.

Today we are told we are involved in a clash of civilizations. Some suggest that the nature of the struggle is such that we can only win by vanquishing our foes militarily while remaking the world around us in our own image and accepting that the values that have guided us in the past may no longer be valid.

Maybe, but we've been through this before. Without surrendering our values, we survived the Cold War against an enemy philosophically committed to a world in which most of what we stand for would have been obliterated. Sometimes our adherence to those values made competing with the Soviets more difficult than some thought necessary, but in the end it was those values and the ideas behind them that made all the difference. We made mistakes then and will in the future, but even as we Face a new enemy, most conservatives are as convinced today as Ronald Reagan was in his day that our values and ideas will ultimately prevail.

David Keene is the long-time chairman of the American Conservative Union. He has worked in every Republican presidential campaign since 1964, serving as Ronald Reagan's southern political director in 1976.

http://www.thefreelibrary.com/A+conservative+continuum.-a0169134290

Articles of Interest 11-25-07

No "Commentary" or "Articles" today.

We'll be back Monday...enjoy the weekend!

November 24, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-24-07

No "Commentary" or "Articles" today.

We'll be back Monday...enjoy the weekend!

November 23, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-23-07

No "Commentary" or "Articles" today.

We'll be back Monday...enjoy the weekend.

November 22, 2007

January 15th Presidential Primary...Dates & Details

DATE AND CALL OF COUNTY CONVENTIONS

County conventions shall be held at 7:30 p.m. Local Time, Thursday, February 7, 2008,
throughout the state at locations registered with the Michigan Republican Party ("MRP") by
Thursday, January 3, 2008.

The location, time and date of meeting of all such county conventions shall be designated
in the call issued for such convention by the chair of the county executive committee (whose term of office commences January 1, 2007), by Thursday, January 3, 2008. For the purposes of these Rules, the term "county committee" shall be read to include the congressional district committees in Wayne County and the congressional district portion committees within the boundaries of Wayne County.

The county executive committee must forward by first class mail a copy of such call to the most recent Republican nominees for state legislative office, the most recent Republican nominees or county office, each precinct delegate duly elected at the August 8, 2006 primary election, and those precinct delegates elected to permanently fill vacancies at all subsequent county conventions. In addition, such call shall be sent to all incumbent members of the State Legislature, the Michigan Congressional delegation, and Statewide Officeholders (see Rule 5C), where such person resides in the county in question.

In the event that delegates to the state convention to be held on February 15 - 16, 2008, (hereinafter sometimes referred to as the "State Convention") are to be elected by an apportionment method in a county convention, as set forth in Rule 9A, a copy of such apportionment shall be included in the call issued for such convention and mailed to delegates and Republican nominees. A copy of the official call for county conventions must be sent to the County Clerk and the MRP Headquarters, 520 Seymour, Lansing, Michigan 48933, by Thursday, January 3, 2008.

If the MRP does not receive the official call by January 3, 2008, the State Party Chair is authorized to rescind any call which may have been or will be issued by the chair of the county executive committee. The State Party Chair is further authorized to issue a call to that county convention.

Articles of Interest 11-22-07

350 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

Michigan Presidential Primary is set for January 15th!!!  See Supreme Court order and release at:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/presidential-pr.html

House Democrats should pass the “fix” bill that passed the Senate two weeks ago putting all the Democrat candidates back on the ballot.  Michigan deserves to have EVERY candidate campaigning in our state.  If they want our votes…they should ask for them.
New Hampshire announced they will hold their primary on January 8th…let the games begin!

Attorney General Mike Cox announced the 4th Annual "Support MI Troops" fundraising drive.  The "Support MI Troops" initiative raises funds to support Michigan soldiers, sailors, and Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan at Doc's Sports Retreat in Livonia on Nov. 28 between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m. 

We’ll take the rest of the weekend off…no more commentary or articles until Monday.
Happy  Thanksgiving!!!

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

HE REST OF THE STORY:

-  The Attorney General Mike Cox’s team succeeded in their appeal to the Supreme Court on behalf of the Secretary of State.  We WILL have a January 15th presidential primary!

We issued the following statement yesterday in response to Michigan Supreme Court ruling that the Jan. 15 presidential primary may be held as scheduled:

“This is a victory for the estimated 2.5 million Michigan voters who will participate in the presidential primary. Today’s ruling means that Michigan will continue to remain relevant in the presidential selection process, and it will be the first major industrial state to hold its primary in 2008. The goal all along has been to give Michigan voters the voice they deserve in determining who should be the respective parties’ nominee for president of the United States. It’s good for Michigan, it’s good for the process, and it’s good for party.”

Anuzis added that he hoped majority Democrats in the Michigan House of Representatives would pass legislation, sent to them two weeks ago by the Republican-led state Senate, that would put all Democrat presidential candidates on Michigan’s primary ballot.  In October, four of the eight current Democrat candidates withdrew their names under pressure from special interest groups intent on preserving Iowa and New Hampshire’s primacy in the presidential selection process.

GONGWERS News Service reported:  Michigan’s January 15 presidential primary will go forward under a decision issued Wednesday by a 4-3 majority of the Supreme Court.  The court said the law served a predominantly public purpose, reversing lower court rulings that said provisions giving the two major parties exclusive access to primary voter lists was an unconstitutional appropriation of public property for private purposes.

Both the Democratic and Republican Parties said they would participate in the primary if the law were to be upheld.  The voter lists at the center of the dispute identify which primary ballot each voter in the primary selects to use.

The court majority said parties’ unquestionable serve a public purpose and that the voter lists help them to support or oppose candidates and ballot issues, which is an integral part of democracy.

Chief Justice Clifford Taylor and Justices Maura Corrigan, Stephen Markman and Robert Young Jr. signed the majority opinion (Grebner v. Michigan, SC docket No. 135274).

Justice Michael Cavanagh would not have taken the appeal and let the lower court rulings stand.  In the dissent, signed by Justice Marilyn Kelly, he said there is no express public purpose in how access to the lists are restricted.  Justice Elizabeth Weaver dissented, saying the lower courts correctly held that a two-thirds majority vote was required to give the lists to the parties.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-22-07" »

November 21, 2007

Presidential Primary ON...Supreme Court Rules!

MI Supreme Court Ruling:

Download 135274_20071121_or.pdf

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Bill Nowling
Wednesday, November 21, 2007

         (517) 487-5413      
bnowling@migop.org

MI Supreme Court Keeps Jan. 15 Presidential Primary
Supreme Court Recognizes "Public Good" of Presidential Primary

LANSING -- Michigan Republican Party Chairman Saulius “Saul” Anuzis issued the following statement today in response to Michigan Supreme Court ruling that the Jan. 15 presidential primary may be held as scheduled:

“This is a victory for the estimated 2.5 million Michigan voters who will participate in the presidential primary. Today’s ruling means that Michigan will continue to remain relevant in the presidential selection process, and it will be the first major industrial state to hold its primary in 2008. The goal all along has been to give Michigan voters the voice they deserve in determining who should be the respective parties’ nominee for president of the United States. It’s good for Michigan, it’s good for the process, and it’s good for party.”

Anuzis added that he hoped majority Democrats in the Michigan House of Representatives would pass legislation, sent to them two weeks ago by the Republican-led state Senate, that would put all Democrat presidential candidates on Michigan’s primary ballot.  In October, four of the eight current Democrat candidates withdrew their names under pressure from special interest groups intent on preserving Iowa and New Hampshire’s primacy in the presidential selection process.

GONGWERS News Service reported:  Michigan’s January 15 presidential primary will go forward under a decision issued Wednesday by a 4-3 majority of the Supreme Court.  The court said the law served a predominantly public purpose, reversing lower court rulings that said provisions giving the two major parties exclusive access to primary voter lists was an unconstitutional appropriation of public property for private purposes.

Both the Democratic and Republican Parties said they would participate in the primary if the law were to be upheld.  The voter lists at the center of the dispute identify which primary ballot each voter in the primary selects to use.

The court majority said parties unquestionable serve a public purpose and that the voter lists help them to support or oppose candidates and ballot issues, which is an integral part of democracy.

Chief Justice Clifford Taylor and Justices Maura Corrigan, Stephen Markman and Robert Young Jr. signed the majority opinion (Grebner v. Michigan, SC docket No. 135274).

Justice Michael Cavanagh would not have taken the appeal and let the lower court rulings stand.  In the dissent, signed by Justice Marilyn Kelly, he said there is no express public purpose in how access to the lists are restricted.  Justice Elizabeth Weaver dissented, saying the lower courts correctly held that a two-thirds majority vote was required to give the lists to the parties.

The Michigan Press Association had also filed a brief on Tuesday asking the entire primary statute be tossed because of First Amendment violations regarding the penalties assessed to journalists and citizens for publishing any information they acquire regarding the voter lists.

MI Supreme Court Ruling:

Download 135274_20071121_or.pdf

Articles of Interest 11-21-07

351 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

Senate Republicans pass the repeal of the sales tax on services…see Senator Bishop’s statement below:

Big Red Tent launches a new on-line tool for Republicans.  Check it out…more below.

Congressman Thaddeus McCotter, Chair of the House Republican Policy Committee, declared the United Nations “a global Tammany Hall lethal to the liberty and dignity of our human family,” and called upon all free nations to create “The Liberty Alliance.”

Attorney General Mike Cox announced the 4th Annual "Support MI Troops" fundraising drive.  The "Support MI Troops" initiative raises funds to support Michigan soldiers, sailors, and Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. The event is will be at Doc's Sports Retreat in Livonia on Nov. 28 between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m. 

Karl Rove publishes his first regular column in Newsweek:

http://www.newsweek.com/id/71000

On-line fundraising for Republicans at Slatecard.com has kicked off.  This is a great venue that I hope you will consider supporting our GOP candidates…we’re behind the Dems in online fundraising…help Walberg or Casperson…give to Knollenberg or McCotter…check out Michigan targets at:

http://slatecard.com/slatecards/migop

The Western Michigan University College Republicans are hosting ABC’s 20/20 Anchor John Stossel on their campus on Wednesday, November 28 at 7pm at the Shaw Theater.  Stossel’s speech is titled ‘Freedom and its Enemies: Why Greed is Good.’

Event is open to public, seating on a first come first serve basis.  With a donation to the 2006 ‘Best College Republican Group in the Nation’ ($50 per person/ $75 per couple) comes reserved seating and access to a private reception with a photo line and book signing.  Books will be available for purchase at the event.  RSVP to MeganBuwalda@hotmail.com

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

- Senate Majority Leader Mike Bishop released the following statement: Core Republican principles have been proven to work in this state, and we need look no further than the 1990s as evidence of this fact. This was a time when Republicans led the state with a greater focus on economic development and lower taxes which gave birth to a robust economy. We saw headlines that read, 'Michigan leads U.S. in new business' or 'State tops U.S. in new job sites.'

The Democratic approach to governing this state has clearly failed. The headlines today read of economic doom and gloom. During the past few years, the Democrats’ economic plan has resulted in Michigan businesses like Comerica and Pfizer moving to other states, Michigan families moving to other states and even our young people – recent college graduates – moving to other states. That’s because the Democratic approach to government – higher spending, higher taxes, bigger government and a complete unwillingness to compromise – simply doesn’t work.

At some point we have to realize that the strategy isn’t working and change our tactics. This governor has been flip-flopping. She and her colleagues have insisted on higher taxes. Then they agree their beloved service tax was a monumental mistake. But they can’t unify behind a plan that would responsibly fix their mistake. It’s time to get back to a strategy that worked – lower taxes, smaller government and a focus on economic development. Simply stated, Democrats must understand we cannot continue to raise taxes on a shrinking tax base. It’s become increasingly obvious that the Democrats currently serving in state government are not in touch with the vast majority of voting Democrats in this state, let alone the balance the electorate.

They cannot continue to hold up moving this process forward by continuing to obsess about generating more revenue. Let’s get back to the principles that will grow our economy and keep people living and working in Michigan."

-  Big Red Tent, the Republican Online Community with Tools for Change, is your tool chest for Republican netroots fundraising and activism.  We are a Federal Political Action Committee that helps you raise money online for your favorite candidates nationwide. 

The launch of Big Red Tent TV on our website is at www.bigredtent.org.
 
On Big Red Tent TV, the host Jill Warren of The Patriot Group, will reach across the country to interview candidates and discuss issues that you care about.  Our first interview is with US Congressman Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI), Chairman of the Republican Policy Committee.  In this interview, Congressman McCotter gives his take on winning elections with core conservative values.  Tune in to find out for what issue he is willing to lose his seat in Congress.

- Congressman McCotter Calls for Creation of The Liberty Alliance in New York at a speech to the Hudson Institutie.

Congressman McCotter, Chair of the House Republican Policy Committee, declared the United Nations “a global Tammany Hall lethal to the liberty and dignity of our human family,” and called upon all free nations to create “The Liberty Alliance.”

In a keynote address at the Hudson Institute’s conference on the United Nations, McCotter also stated the free nations should stay in the U.N. to keep an eye on freedom’s enemies, but said our dues should be the same amount as paid by the UN’s tyrant states.

McCotter cited two statistics proving the UN’s dysfunction:  “Only 46% of the UN’s members are free nations; but the UN’s top ten financial contributors are all free nations.”

Read the full speech online at

http://mccotter.house.gov

The conference, titled the “Hijacking Human Rights:

The Demonization of Israel by the United Nations,” was held in New York City. The event was sponsored by the Hudson Institute, the American Association of Jewish Lawyers and Jurists Touro Institute on Human Rights and the Holocaust Hudson Institute, included speeches by professors, ambassadors, and members of Congress, coincided with the General Assembly's upcoming annual adoption of over 20 anti-Israel resolutions.

- Attorney General Mike Cox announced the 4th Annual "Support MI Troops" fundraising drive.  The "Support MI Troops" initiative raises funds to support Michigan soldiers, sailors, and Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The public is invited to stop by Doc's Sports Retreat in Livonia on Nov. 28 between 5:00 and 8:00 p.m.  All proceeds go to benefit the Bob Woodruff Family Fund for Traumatic Brain Injury ($25.00 suggested donation at the door).

The "Support MI Troops" initiative raises funds to support Michigan soldiers, sailors, and Marines serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.  This year's fundraiser will benefit the Bob Woodruff Family Fund founded by Michigan native Bob Woodruff in order to raise funds for soldiers who are suffering from traumatic brain and head injuries.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-21-07" »

November 20, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-20-07

352 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

The Macomb County GOP Tribute to conservative leaders was a great success!  The special guest was Congressman Duncan Hunter.  Congrats on a job well done…and thanks to those who stand on principle!!!

Attorney General Mike Cox ended the evening after the “Ax the Tax” axes were handed out to the various honorees by suggesting next year’s slogan could be: “no taxation with Republican representation”!

The Attorney General on behalf of the Secretary of State filed an appeal with the Michigan Supreme Court to get a final ruling on holding the Michigan presidential primary.  They have asked for an expedited hearing which means hopefully we will know by Wednesday.  My argument is:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/mi-court-of-app.html

The House Democrats have decided NOT to come in this week to do any work…they took last week off as well.  The presidential “fix” bill which passed the Senate is just “sitting” there, waiting for some action/work out of the House Democrats.

Here is our press release & our Supreme Court filings:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/press-release-p.html

On-line fundraising for Republicans at Slatecard.com has kicked off.  This is a great venue that I hope you will consider supporting our GOP candidates…we’re behind the Dems in online fundraising…help Walberg or Casperson…or give to Knollenberg or McCotter…check out Michigan targets at:

http://slatecard.com/slatecards/migop

An obituary for Mr. Common Sense….a must read:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/obituary-of-the.html

I’m was on Detroit’s CBS “Michigan Matters”… I provided a couple of guest commentaries about healthcare and tax & spend policy…check it out:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/anuzis-gives-vi.html

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/chairman-anuzis.html

We’ll be taking Thanksgiving weekend off of emails to spend a little time with the family…so just getting you all ready for a break in the action…hot stuff (news) to be posted on our blog.

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

No further commentary today

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-20-07" »

November 19, 2007

Press Release: Presidential Primary to Supreme Court

Supreme Court Filings below:

Download grebner_msc_final.pdf

Download grebner_msc_motions_and_aff.pdf

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

CONTACT: Bill Nowling

Monday, November 19, 2007

         (517) 487-5413       
bnowling@migop.org

Supreme Court Asked to Preserve MI Primary
Democrat-Controlled State House Still Has Time to Pass Legislation to 'Fix' Primary and Allow Voters to Decide Nominees

LANSING -- While the state of Michigan today appealed to the state Supreme Court in an effort to save the Jan. 15 presidential primary, Michigan Republican Party Chairman Saulius “Saul” Anuzis called on Democrat Speaker Andy Dillon to immediately take up legislation that would preserve the constitutionality of the presidential contest and give Michigan voters the voice they deserve.

“Republicans support a presidential primary, Governor Granholm supports a presidential primary, the vast majority of independent-minded Michigan voters support a primary.  What part of that don’t House Democrats understand?” Anuzis asked. “I am confident that the state will prevail on its appeal to the Michigan Supreme Court because of the overwhelming public good a presidential primary creates. But Democrats in the Michigan House could solve this issue once and for all by immediately passing legislation that Senate Republicans sent them two weeks ago.”

The Republican-led Michigan Senate passed a legislative ‘fix’ after a state court judge ruled the entire primary unconstitutional over concerns of how primary voter lists would handled. A Michigan Court of Appeals panel last week refused to overturn the lower court’s ruling on the primary.

The Senate legislation addresses constitutional concerns raised by Ingham County Circuit Court Judge William Collette, and it also restores all Democrat presidential candidates to the primary ballot.  This legislation is similar to laws in other states and would place on Michigan’s ballot the names of candidates who participate in other primaries or caucuses. Michigan’s law won't require them to participate, but it will simply require their name to appear on the ballot.

# # #

Articles of Interest 11-19-07

353 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

Presidential primary is still in question.  We are hoping that the House Democrats pass the “fix” legislation that has already passed the Senate.  We are working on a number of legal remedies and we expect the Attorney General to file an appeal on behalf of the Secretary of State with the Supreme Court ASAP to try and settle this.  If we’re lucky, we’ll know for sure by Wednesday?

On-line fundraising for Republicans at Slatecard.com has kicked off.  This is a great venue that I hope you will consider supporting …check out Michigan targets at:

http://slatecard.com/slatecards/migop

Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land's Royal Oak Grassroots Gala is tonight at Woody's Diner 208 5th Ave, Royal Oak…hope to see you there!

Congressman Duncan Hunter coming to Michigan…for more information:

http://bconservatives.blogspot.com/2007/11/duncan-hunter-in-michigan.html

We’ll be taking Thanksgiving weekend off of emails to spend a little time with the family…so just getting you all ready for a break in the action…hot stuff (news) to be posted on our blog.

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

No further commentary today.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-19-07" »

November 18, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-18-07

354 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

Quote of the Day:

"Stand with anybody that stands RIGHT. Stand with him while he is right and PART with him when he goes wrong." The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln edited by Roy P. Basler, Volume II, "Speech at Peoria, Illinois" (October 16, 1854), p. 273.

Great football….MSU Spartans come from behind while Michigan suffers a big defeat.  However, it was a great way to end the college football season…a few snow flakes, barbeques and cold ones!

Congressman Duncan Hunter coming to Michigan…for more information:

http://bconservatives.blogspot.com/2007/11/duncan-hunter-in-michigan.html

Columnist Michael Barone writes about the power of public employee unions…see his blog and this week’s column which is enlightening given Michigan’s challenges:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/the-power-of-pu.html

An obituary for Mr. Common Sense….a must read:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/obituary-of-the.html

I’m on Detroit’s CBS “Michigan Matters”… I provided a couple of guest commentaries  about healthcare and tax & spend policy…check it out:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/anuzis-gives-vi.html

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/chairman-anuzis.html

Sunday Talk Show “Tip Sheet” from POLITICO:

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1107/6945.html

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org

THE REST OF THE STORY:

No further commentary today.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-18-07" »

November 17, 2007

Articles of Interest 11-17-07

355 Days until Election Day

MORNING UPDATE:

The Court of Appeals refused to overturn the lower court ruling…now it’s up to the House Democrats to pass the “fix”…the Presidential primary is in the hands of the Governor and the Democrats in the House of Representatives.

Here was why I thought that we should prevail:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/mi-court-of-app.htm

Here is a great article about Congressman Dave Camp in National Review:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/files/NR-DLC.pdf

So what does a Democrat controlled Congress mean for America???   Pretty scary…share:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/democrat-contro.html

An obituary for Mr. Common Sense….a must read:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/obituary-of-the.html

I’m on Detroit’s CBS “Michigan Matters”… I provided a couple of guest commentaries about healthcare and tax & spend policy…check it out:

http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/anuzis-gives-vi.html
http://migop.blogs.com/blog/2007/11/chairman-anuzis.html
Sunday Talk Show “Tip Sheet” from POLITICO:
http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1107/6945.html
The last college football tailgates of the year…go green…go blue!

Give a Gift this Holiday Season that Will Last a Lifetime!

The Michigan Republicans moved their headquarters to the Secchia-Weiser Republican Center in 2006 and plan to install a legacy site to honor those who have served the party and the citizens of Michigan.  The legacy site will create a well-deserved tribute to honor Michigan’s past, present, and future Republican leaders!  Buy a brick to celebrate, to inspire, or to commemorate friends, family, or yourself this holiday season!  They are a great way to honor others in memoriam, birthdays, anniversaries, or any special occasion.  Your honoree will receive a certificate commemorating their personalized brick.  Choose from our four different options and be a part of the Michigan Republican Party Legacy! 

To order your personalized Legacy Brick please visit www.migop.org/legacy, or contact Erin Meteer, Major Donor Program Manager at emeteer@migop.org


THE REST OF THE STORY:

- There are several legislative options as well as an appeal to the Supreme Court.  None of the parties involved intended to stop the primary, rather this was a question of how the party IDs on the voter lists would be handled.

I am still cautiously optimistic that we will work something out and hold the primary.  The delays are really causing trouble for the clerks and sending mixed signals nationwide to everyone.

The Democrats continue to play games…we need some leadership from the Governor and the other Democrat leaders who “talk the talk” but haven’t been able to deliver!  Very frustrating.

Next week will be interesting…stay tuned.

Saul Anuzis

Continue reading "Articles of Interest 11-17-07" »

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