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  • Turkey's Lobbyist

    Town Hall, DC
    Oct 13 2007


    Turkey's Lobbyist

    By Robert D. Novak
    Saturday, October 13, 2007


    WASHINGTON -- Former Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, a registered
    lobbyist for Turkey, failed several months ago to get his successor
    as top House Democrat, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, to withdraw her support
    from a long-pending resolution condemning alleged Turkish genocide of
    Armenians in 1915.

    The Bush administration had urged Congress not to offend Turkey, a
    U.S. ally, but the measure passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee
    Wednesday. Pelosi has pledged House action this year on the genocide
    resolution that in the past was blocked by Dennis Hastert, her
    Republican predecessor as speaker.

    U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks during a visit
    to the Bayview Child Health Center in San Francisco, California
    September 13, 2007. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith (UNITED STATES)
    Related Media:

    HILLARY'S ADVISER

    Prominent Democrats, while minimizing the revelation that Sandy
    Berger is advising Sen. Hillary Clinton on foreign affairs, stress
    that the disgraced former national security adviser would have no
    role in her presidency.

    Clinton says Berger is strictly an unofficial adviser. Berger avoided
    a prison sentence for illegally removing classified documents from
    the National Archives, agreeing to a $50,000 fine, 100 hours'
    community service and two years' probation, along with losing his
    security clearance.

    Berger's role in the Clinton campaign is explained by the senator's
    supporters as stemming from close family ties forged when he was a
    senior official in President Bill Clinton's White House.

    ROMNEY'S BLUNDERS

    Mitt Romney, who tries to come over as a picture-perfect candidate,
    committed his second off-the-cuff blunder at Tuesday's Republican
    presidential debate in Dearborn, Mich.

    Asked whether he would go to Congress for authorization to take
    military action against Iran's nuclear facilities, the former
    Massachusetts governor said: "You sit down with your attorneys and
    [they] tell you what you have to do." He added that "we're going to
    let the lawyers sort out" the problem.

    Two months earlier in a town hall event at Bettendorf, Iowa, Romney
    was asked whether any of his five sons were serving in the military
    and, if not, how they supported the war against terrorism. He
    replied: "One of the ways my sons are showing support for our nation
    is helping to get me elected."

    SEN. RICHARDSON?

    Sen. Charles Schumer, the Senate Democratic campaign chairman, is
    pressing New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson to give up his presidential
    bid and run for his state's Senate seat held by retiring Republican
    Sen. Pete Domenici.

    Republicans hope to hold the New Mexico seat with Rep. Heather
    Wilson, since the most popular Democratic prospect, Rep. Tom Udall,
    has decided not to run. Richardson, a former congressman and Clinton
    administration Cabinet member, has been a popular governor and would
    be heavily favored for the Senate.

    However, friends of Richardson predict he will resist the pressure to
    be the Senate candidate. Although he is given no chance to win the
    presidential nomination, Richardson has broken through to the top of
    the second-tier candidates and is a serious prospect to become Sen.
    Hillary Clinton's vice-presidential running mate. Party strategists
    see Richardson, a Mexican-American, appealing to Latino votes in four
    Western states that could swing the 2008 presidential election:
    Colorado, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico.

    LOBBYING FOR SCHIP

    Newspaper and television ads in Rep. James Walsh's Syracuse, N.Y.,
    district this week boosted the 10-term Republican congressman's
    support of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)
    vetoed by President Bush. The advertising, not produced by Walsh and
    a surprise to him, was put out by the Americans for Children's Health
    coalition seeking support for the expansion of government-provided
    health care.

    The ads, purchased in districts of Walsh and other Republican
    congressman who broke with Bush on health care, push them to override
    the veto.

    The coalition consists of member organizations of health care
    industries: drugs (Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
    America), doctors (American Medical Association), nursing homes
    (American Health Care Association), consumers (Families USA) and
    hospitals (Federation of American Hospitals).


    Robert Novak is a syndicated columnist and editor of the Evans-Novak
    Political Report

    http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/RobertDNovak/ 2007/10/13/turkeys_lobbyist

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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