Author Topic: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP  (Read 2358 times)

TerminalPower

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McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« on: August 27, 2008, 02:39:29 PM »
While this was rumored my source says it is fact and she has accepted the nomination and will be announced Friday if not sooner.

Again the Democrats get outsmarted by republicans.  Let the Democrats again cry how unfair this election is going to be and wonder why after Bush, they STILL couldn't win/buy an election.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/nation/5967502.html

Some say Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, shown with John McCain in Round Rock in February, could draw disaffected Hillary Clinton supporters.

CRAWFORD — Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison's long-shot prospect for vice president is getting a push from conservative and other pundits in the lead-up to next week's Republican National Convention.

The latest flurry of speculation online and on cable television constitutes at least a third or fourth wave of chatter about Hutchison, whose name surfaces occasionally as a possible Republican vice-presidential candidate.

Hutchison, a delegate to next week's convention, will address the gathering in Minneapolis-St. Paul on the subject of energy independence on Sept. 3, her office announced Tuesday.

The speaker slot would seem to douse the veep-talk, but no one would say for sure. A spokesman for Hutchison declined to comment, and the McCain campaign did not return a call about McCain's colleague from Texas.

"She is female, which addresses the novelty of the opposition; she is smart and well-respected; she is knowledgeable on key issues, especially domestic policy," said Bruce Buchanan, a University of Texas at Austin government professor. "I still think it's going to be Mitt Romney."

Announcement expected
McCain, the Arizona senator and presumptive Republican nominee, is expected to announce his choice for vice president at the end of the week.

Hutchison, 66, would be "an excellent choice," syndicated husband-and-wife columnists Dick Morris and Eileen McGann said in a piece that catalyzed renewed speculation on the subject.

"She's been around for decades and is not going to start making mistakes now," they wrote. "Her nomination would be a signal to American women that McCain takes their aspirations seriously, even if Obama does not. Hutchison is not charismatic. But her circumstances would be if she were nominated. The prospect of a woman vice president would electrify women throughout the nation."

Hutchison has served in the Senate since a 1993 special election.

She has said she will not seek re-election in 2012, and is expected to step down before then, for a likely run in the 2010 governor's race.

Houston Republican political consultant Allen Blakemore, who has worked for Hutchison in the past, noted she just scheduled an Oct. 1 campaign event for County Judge Ed Emmett's re-election bid, and said a veep spot seems unlikely.

"She has clearly set her sights on governor and looks at that as the way she wants to complete her long and distinguished career of public service," Blakemore said.

Earlier this week on CNN, Republican strategist Ed Rollins touted Hutchison as "well respected" and a name McCain should consider.

The short odds for McCain's vice-presidential picks include Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former White House budget official Rob Portman of Ohio and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

"The conservatives could probably stomach (Hutchison) a lot better than a Tom Ridge or Joe Lieberman," said University of Houston political scientist Richard Murray. "She is a woman and their strategy seems to be to go for disaffected Clinton voters. But I would say this is more like the Chet Edwards boomlet — it raises the profile, there is no downside to being mentioned, but Hutchison at this point looks like a last-minute ploy, not a considered judgment."

Another look at Hutchison
In his online column for the conservative TownHall.com, Michael Medved argued that McCain should reject the Pawlenty-Portman-Romney types as too safe and take another look at Hutchison.

"OK, she's not a dynamo of fiery charisma; in fact, as I've noted before, she's a bland and sometimes boring speaker, and a pleasant if unprepossessing television presence. Nevertheless, she is a she — and that fact in itself would allow McCain's choice to upstage Obama's," Medved wrote.

Among other things, having a woman on the ticket could bring in the disenfranchised Hillary Clinton supporters, Medved argued.

Rice University political scientist Bob Stein noted that Hutchison, who recently adopted two small children, appears more interested in a commute between the governor's mansion and state Capitol than the high-profile, international fly-around of the vice presidency.

He noted that Hutchison and McCain share key strengths, like expertise in military affairs.

"She wouldn't add much to the slate, but she is a Southerner and female," Stein said.

Over at Fox News, meanwhile, host Laura Ingraham was not impressed.

"Some people think Kay Bailey Hutchison in Texas. I think that's unlikely," she said.

julie.mason@chron.com
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Purge_WTF

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #1 on: August 27, 2008, 02:57:36 PM »
  How did the "Democrats get outsmarted by the Republicans" here? People aren't gonna go from being Democrat to voting Republican just because McCain picked a woman to be his VP.

mightymouse72

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #2 on: August 27, 2008, 03:08:47 PM »
Still rumors.  Remains to be seen.  Although..... picking a woman..... it would be over for Obamarats.   ;D
My guess is still with Romney.
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TerminalPower

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #3 on: August 27, 2008, 04:50:02 PM »
  How did the "Democrats get outsmarted by the Republicans" here? People aren't gonna go from being Democrat to voting Republican just because McCain picked a woman to be his VP.

Easily, Centrists and especially the large number of Democratic centrists (especially Hillary supporters) will be pleasantly happy with the thought of a more centrist woman VP like Kay as the first ever Woman VP.  Again, not all Hillary supporters but she has millions and Barack told all of them to kiss his ass.

Conservatives have no choice but to vote for McCain.  Centrists (undecided) will look for who is closer to center and clearly this pick isn't great for Conservatives because they would like a Huckabee or Romney pick more.  Undecided Dem's and Hillary supporters will know at least McCain cares about needs of woman desires and McCain is listening (and winning the undecided votes).  Many Hillary supporters just needed a good reason to bounce over to McCain...NOW THEY HAVE ONE.

Again you Left Wing'ers out there (if the shoe fits wear it) you won't think any of this is true and that is why you will lose another election when this one was handed to you on a silver platter.  Obama/Clinton sealed the deal for Dems and Hussein went for Biden instead.

McCain check-mates Obama with this pick.  We will see.
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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #4 on: August 27, 2008, 04:53:37 PM »
Still with romney, but she's a compelling slap in the face to dems!

Obama will kick himself for not picking hilary.

TerminalPower

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #5 on: August 27, 2008, 04:55:14 PM »
Still with romney, but she's a compelling slap in the face to dems!

Obama will kick himself for not picking hilary.

Yea Romney is the front runner...I am an underdog kinda guy.  I agree with you 100% though.
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Purge_WTF

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #6 on: August 27, 2008, 05:09:50 PM »
Conservatives have no choice but to vote for McCain.

 We also have the choice of staying home on election day.

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #7 on: August 27, 2008, 05:13:42 PM »
Yea Romney is the front runner...I am an underdog kinda guy.  I agree with you 100% though.

i had clinton all the way.

i still think he was absolutely mad not to pick her.  first majorly dumb move he's made.

shootfighter1

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #8 on: August 27, 2008, 06:02:09 PM »
The way he handled Hillary and snubbed her for VP could possibly cost him the election....or at least I will say that if he picked her, the Dems were almost certain to win.

youandme

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #9 on: August 27, 2008, 06:21:04 PM »
The way he handled Hillary and snubbed her for VP could possibly cost him the election....or at least I will say that if he picked her, the Dems were almost certain to win.

Bill's speech tonight is awfully impressive. Geesh he had to tell the crowd to "stop" cheering, pretty nutty.

After this it's going to be funny though to watch Bill say bad things about Obama

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #10 on: August 27, 2008, 06:43:30 PM »
Bill's speech tonight is awfully impressive. Geesh he had to tell the crowd to "stop" cheering, pretty nutty.

After this it's going to be funny though to watch Bill say bad things about Obama

His speech was 3 times better than Hilary's was.

Remember... most of Hilary's voters were Bill's voters.  When Bill points them at Obama, they attacked.  When Bill tells them to vote for Obama, many will.

Plus CLinton was able to say "Look how it was under me" and list items.
Then he listed all the fvckups Bush committed.

NOBODY else on earth can make that claim, that pwning of legacies.

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #11 on: August 27, 2008, 08:36:03 PM »
Interesting.  I've heard her name tossed about a bit, but never thought she was on the short list. 

She has some legal trouble in her background that would certainly be discussed if she is nominated. 

I like her. 

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #12 on: August 27, 2008, 08:42:34 PM »
His speech was 3 times better than Hilary's was.

Remember... most of Hilary's voters were Bill's voters.  When Bill points them at Obama, they attacked.  When Bill tells them to vote for Obama, many will.

Plus CLinton was able to say "Look how it was under me" and list items.
Then he listed all the fvckups Bush committed.

NOBODY else on earth can make that claim, that pwning of legacies.

His speech was good, in fact he painted the Obama camp better than Obama has.

Interesting, but you missed alot of points regarding the speech and key words, such as when he said "he has....instincts" when just 3 days ago he said Obama had the "instincts of a Chicago thug" the speech is rittled with a play on his own words, which he expects the media will pick up on later, as he drops bombs and more bombs during dinners and Democratic get togethers.

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #13 on: August 28, 2008, 09:19:19 AM »
Bill's speech was incredibly impressive....however, you don't go from intelligently criticizing someone for 9 months to praising them for 1 night at the convention with a lot of believability.  Just shows the strength of the Clintons...and also what they are willing to do for themselves & their party.

I do not see Obama being able to match Bill Clinton tonight.

I don't know much about Kay Hutchinson, besides hearing her name.  Anyone have some brief info?

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #14 on: August 28, 2008, 11:53:52 AM »
Bill's speech was incredibly impressive....however, you don't go from intelligently criticizing someone for 9 months to praising them for 1 night at the convention with a lot of believability.  Just shows the strength of the Clintons...and also what they are willing to do for themselves & their party.

I do not see Obama being able to match Bill Clinton tonight.

I don't know much about Kay Hutchinson, besides hearing her name.  Anyone have some brief info?

Here is her background:

 
Born July 22, 1943 (1943-07-22) (age 65)
La Marque, Texas
Political party Republican
Spouse Second husband Ray Hutchison
Residence Dallas, Texas
Alma mater University of Texas at Austin
Occupation attorney, journalist, bank executive

Religion Episcopalian
Kathryn Ann Bailey Hutchison, usually known as Kay Bailey Hutchison (born July 22, 1943), is the senior United States Senator from Texas. She is a member of the Republican Party. In 2001, she was named one of "The 30 most powerful women in America" by Ladies Home Journal. She is the first woman to represent Texas in the U.S. Senate.

Family life
Hutchison was born in Galveston to Kathryn Ella Sharp and Allan Abner Bailey,[1] an insurance agent. She has two brothers, Allan and Frank. Hutchison grew up in La Marque, Texas. She divorced her first husband, a medical student.

In 2001, Hutchison adopted two children (daughter Kathryn Bailey and son Houston Taylor) with her second husband, [2] Ray Hutchison, whom she married in 1978. He has two grown daughters, Brenda and Julie, from a previous marriage. Ray Hutchison, also a former member of the Texas Legislature and unsuccessful candidate for Texas governor in 1978, is a senior partner with the law fim of Vinson & Elkins.

Senator Hutchison and her family have their primary residence in Dallas, Texas. She has a second house in Virginia, where she lives when the Senate is in session, and where her children attend school.

She is a supporter of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation where she is a honorary board member.[2]

Education and early career
She received her bachelor of arts degree from the University of Texas at Austin in 1962, where she was a cheerleader in the 1960s, and a sister of Pi Beta Phi sorority. She received her J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law in 1967. Following her graduation from law school, she was the legal and political correspondent for KPRC-TV in Houston.

In 1972, Hutchison was elected to the Texas House of Representatives from a district in Houston. She served until 1976. She was vice-chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board from 1976 to 1978. She was a candidate for election to the United States House of Representatives in 1982 for the Dallas-based 3rd District, but was defeated in the primary by Steve Bartlett. She temporarily left politics and became a bank executive and successful businesswoman.


1993 Senate special election
Hutchison was elected Texas State Treasurer in 1990 and served until June 1993 when she ran against Senator Bob Krueger for the right to complete the last two years of Lloyd Bentsen's term. Bentsen had resigned in January 1993 to become Secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton administration. Krueger had been appointed by Texas Governor Ann Richards to fill the seat until a replacement was elected.

A field of 24 candidates sought to fill Bentsen's unexpired term, in the May 1993 special election. [3]. The top two vote-getters were Hutchison (593,338, or 29 percent) and Krueger (593,239, also 29 percent). Two conservative Republican congressmen, Joe Barton of Dallas (284,135 or 13.9 percent) and Jack Fields of Houston (277,560, or 13.6 percent) split pro-life voters (although Hutchison calls herself "pro-life", she does not advocate overturning Roe v. Wade). Their combined vote was 561,695, still a third-place finish. A fifth candidate, Democrat Richard W. Fisher, polled 165,564 votes (8.1 percent); the remaining candidates had about 6 percent combined.

During the campaign Krueger charged that Hutchison was a "country club Republican" and insensitive to the feelings of minorities. [3] In January, the Houston Chronicle reported that both Hutchison and Fields had promised to serve a maximum of two six-year terms in the Senate as part of her support for term limit legislation for members of Congress. In April, the Dallas Morning News reported that Hutchison had repeated her pledge to serve only two terms in the U.S. Senate, if elected, and had also said term limits ought to cover all senators, including Senator Phil Gramm (R-TX), who had been elected in 1984 and re-elected in 1990. (He would stay in the Senate until 2002.) The term-limits legislation never passed, and Hutchison has said that she would not leave the Senate in the absence of such legislation, because doing so would unilaterally hurt Texas at the expense of other states in the seniority-driven institution.

After the initial voting, most of the Barton and Fields voters switched to Hutchison, who won the runoff, 1,188,716 (67.3 percent) to 576,538 (32.7 percent). Lower turnout in the runoff resulted in a decrease in Krueger's vote total, by 17,000. Hutchison became the first woman to represent Texas in the U.S. Senate.

Following Hutchison's election in 1993, Texas has had two sitting Republican U.S. senators.


1993–1994 prosecution
Shortly after the special election victory, Travis County authorities, led by Democratic district attorney Ronnie Earle, raided Hutchison's offices at the State Treasury looking for proof of allegations that Hutchison used state equipment and employees on state time to help with her campaign. She was indicted by a grand jury in September 1993 for official misconduct and records tampering.

The case against Hutchison was heard before State District Judge John Onion in February, 1994. During pre-trial proceedings, the judge announced that he would make no rulings on the admissibility of evidence prior to the trial. The evidence was to include data from tapes maintained by Treasury employees. Hutchison had allegedly given instructions that the data be deleted from the department's computers (during the course of the trial, these data — enclosed in a pizza box — were turned over to the Travis County DA's office).

This was a ruling DA Earle considered critical. Earle felt that it was a technique designed to torpedo his case, because Onion could rule mid-trial that certain important evidence was inadmissible under the Texas Rules of Evidence [4].

Following Onion's ruling, Earle declined to proceed with his case. Though he had intended to continue the case later, Onion declined to give Earle that opportunity. The judge instead swore in a jury and immediately ordered the panel to acquit Hutchison when no evidence had been presented to them by Earle. The acquittal barred any future prosecution of Hutchison. [5] Later that year, Earle granted reporters access to the files he had amassed to make his case against Hutchison. [6]


1994 and 2000 Senate elections
In 1994, the election for her first full term, Hutchison received 2,604,281 votes (60.8 percent) to 1,639,615 votes (38.3 percent) cast for Democrat Richard W. Fisher, the son-in-law of the late Republican Congressman James M. Collins, who had also run in the special election the year before.

In 2000 she defeated Democrat Gene Kelly, with 4,082,091 (65 percent) to 2,030,315 (32.2 percent). She carried 237 of the 254 counties, including one of the most Democratic counties, Webb County (Laredo). This was the only time since the early 1900s that Webb County had supported a Republican candidate for any office on a partisan ballot. More than four million Texans voted for Hutchison that year — still the record highest number of actual votes ever cast in Texas for a non-presidential candidate (George W. Bush received 4,526,917 votes in Texas in the 2004 election).


2006 Senate election
Main article: Texas United States Senate election, 2006
Speculation began in 2004 that Hutchison would run for Governor of Texas in 2006, challenging current Governor Rick Perry in the Republican primary. However, on June 17, 2005, Hutchison announced that she would seek reelection to the Senate instead, reneging on an earlier promise to a two-term limit. Many political analysts speculated that she did not believe she could defeat Perry in the GOP primary because of his popularity among Christian conservatives, while her Senate seat was unlikely to face a serious threat.

Hutchison's Democratic opponent in the November 2006 general election was former Houston attorney and mediator Barbara Ann Radnofsky (born July 8, 1956), who had not previously run for public office. Radnofsky received 44 percent of the vote in the primary and won a runoff election against Gene Kelly with 60 percent of the vote. Kelly had been the unsuccessful Democratic nominee against Hutchison in 2000. Libertarian Scott Lanier Jameson (born July 1, 1966), a real estate consultant from Plano, also ran for the seat.

Radnofsky faced an uphill battle in a state that has not elected a Democrat statewide since 1994, as George W. Bush's landslide reelection as governor in 1998 had helped carry Republicans into all the other statewide offices. In the August 2006 Rasmussen poll, Hutchison led her opponent by 30 percentage points — 61 to 31. [7]. The Survey USA Poll, which is not a head-to-head matchup, but only lists approval ratings of incumbents, found Hutchison with a 61 percent approval rating. [8] The Zogby poll, in contrast, showed a closer result, but still showed Hutchison with a 17.3 percent lead — the highest of any incumbent Republican Zogby tracks. [9]. The authors stated "...Republican Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, who got 65 percent of the vote in 2000, is a safe bet to win a third term."

On election night 2006, Hutchison won re-election to another term, winning 2,661,789 votes (61.7%). Radnofsky won 1,555,202 votes (36.04%). [10] Radnofsky only won in base Democratic areas, carrying only border counties with strong Hispanic majorities, such as El Paso and Webb (Laredo) and in Travis County (Austin). Hutchison won everything else, having procured majorities in 236 of the state's 254 counties.


Voting Record
On Feb 2, 2005, Hutchison sought to curtail the ability of plaintiffs to file class-action lawsuits against corporations [4]


Political views
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Kay Bailey HutchisonHutchison serves on the following Senate committees: Appropriations; Commerce, Science and Transportation; Rules and Administration; Veterans' Affairs. During her time in the Senate, Hutchison has been a strong supporter of NASA.

 
Hutchison speaking.In June of 2000, Hutchison and her Senate colleagues coauthored Nine and Counting: The Women of the Senate. In 2004, her book, American Heroines: The Spirited Women Who Shaped Our Country, was published.

From 2001 to 2007, Hutchison served as Chairwoman of the Senate Republican Conference (caucus), making her the fifth-ranking Republican in the Senate behind Majority Leader Bill Frist, Majority Whip Mitch McConnell and conference chairman Rick Santorum, and Policy Chairman Jon Kyl. In 2007, Hutchison succeeded Jon Kyl as the Policy Chair for Senate Republicans, the fourth ranking leadership position in the Republican caucus behind Minority Leader McConnell, Minority Whip, and conference chairman Kyl.

The National Journal ranked Hutchison as follows in its 2004 rankings, which are based on various key votes relating to economic policy, social policy, and foreign policy: "Economic: 26% Liberal, 73% Conservative; Social: 38% Liberal, 60% Conservative; Foreign: 0% Liberal, 67% Conservative. Although a loyal Conservative Republican she has been known to cross over to the other side on a few issues. She is more likely to do this than either Phil Gramm or his successor John Cornyn." A poll that was released on June 19, 2007, shows that Hutchison has an approval rating of 58%, with 34% disapproving.[11]


Abortion positions
Hutchison is against outlawing abortion.[5] She also believes that the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade was appropriate and secures a constitutional right, and that it should not be overturned.[6]

Hutchison is currently considered to be liberal on abortion issues, at least compared to most elected Republicans from Texas.[citation needed] Although she has served on the Advisory Board of The Wish List (Women in the Senate and House) Political Action Committee, which contributes to pro-choice female Republican candidates for Congress, she is no longer on the board [12] and the PAC did not endorse her in 2006. [13]. In the past years NARAL has given her ratings of 0%, 7%, 20%, and 0%, indicating that her voting record mostly favored enacting proposed abortion restrictions. [14]

While in the Texas House of Representatives (1973 to 1977), Hutchison worked to protect rape victims from having their names published with Sarah Weddington, the attorney who won the Roe v. Wade case. She supports some abortion rights, but does not believe taxpayers should fund abortions. Hutchison has also endorsed parental notification laws [15] and in 2006 sponsored legislation to prevent minors from being transported across state lines to circumvent such laws.


Pistol ban controversy
Hutchison proposed the "District of Columbia Personal Protection Act," which drew 31 cosponsors in the United States Senate, while drawing 157 cosponsors from the House. This bill would have dismantled the handgun bans the city has had for thirty years. DC's law states that one may possess a rifle or shotgun as long as they are disassembled and inoperative, but not pistols. The law was recently struck down in a U.S. Supreme Court ruling.

Hutchison formerly had resided in D.C., but has since moved her family to Virginia, in addition to her de jure residence in Texas.


Environmental record
In 2006, Hutchison received more campaign contributions from large oil and gas corporations than any other member of Congress.[7] In 2005, Hutchison voted against prohibiting oil leasing in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and has supported legislation promoting drilling in the refuge in 2002 and 2003. In 2005 she also voted against including oil and gas smokestacks in the Environmental Protection Agency's mercury regulations.[8][9] In 1999, she voted to remove funding for renewable and solar energy, although she has more recently stated she supports the development of alternative energy sources.[10] According to the League of Conservation Voters environmental scorecard, Hutchison received a rating of zero — the lowest possible score — in the 104th Congress.[11]


Border issues
Senator Hutchison supports local consultation between communities along the border and the Department of Homeland Security to determine what type of fencing and security measures make sense in particular areas based on what those officials see on the ground. She has stated that bureaucrats in Washington are hardly positioned to determine the most effective measures, which areas of the border are experiencing the most significant problems, and how construction of the fence will impact local communities. The conservative advocacy group grassfire.org criticizes this position arguing that a consultation process will slow down construction of the fence and provide an opening for so called "open border" advocates to kill the fence project all together.


Political future
Hutchison is the most senior female Republican senator, having been elected in 1993. Next in line is Senator Olympia Snowe (R-ME), who was elected in 1994.

In February 2006, TheWhiteHouseProject.org [16] named Hutchison as one of its "8 in '08", a group of eight female politicians who could possibly be elected President in 2008.

Hutchison's name has been circulated as a possible Vice-Presidential candidate for Republican John McCain. Her strong record as a conservative, female politician from the American Southwest could induce the GOP to add her name to the ticket in an effort to balance any perceived gender gap between the parties. In February 2008, on ABC's This Week, Hutchison said “I think that Sen. McCain has a lot of options, I think he has to look at a lot of different factors. I don’t want to be vice president."[12]

Hutchison is also considered a possible candidate for the governorship of Texas in 2010.

In an interview with Texas Monthly, Hutchison said she would not seek re-election after this term and may leave as early as 2009, to allow a new senator to build seniority before the 2012 election. If she is elected governor in 2010, a temporary appointment will be made by the governor, perhaps by Hutchison herself.[13]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kay_Bailey_Hutchison#1993.E2.80.931994_prosecution

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #15 on: August 28, 2008, 11:57:22 AM »
there are a lot of candidates who HAVEN'T had their office raded by feds and beat charges of abuse of office on a loophole.


TerminalPower

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #16 on: August 28, 2008, 02:53:36 PM »
We also have the choice of staying home on election day.

If you are a conservative you don't because you are smart enough to recognize the futility in such stupidity.  As bad of a conservative McCain is....the alternative is much worse.  Lick our wounds and Vote McCain.
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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #17 on: August 28, 2008, 03:05:36 PM »
Thanks for the info BB.

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #18 on: August 28, 2008, 03:09:32 PM »
If only this were true.

A move of this sort smacks of such grandiose stupidity that McCain is probably really just throwing the election.

Yes, let's elect a 70+ year old man with a woman waiting in the wings to take control of the country.

Typical Republican ticket...

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #19 on: August 28, 2008, 03:39:57 PM »
Thanks for the info BB.

No problem.  I don't think he will select her because she is pro choice. 

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #20 on: August 28, 2008, 04:06:32 PM »
No problem.  I don't think he will select her because she is pro choice. 

Yea thanks BB I appreciate the good information too.
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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #21 on: August 28, 2008, 04:31:26 PM »
Yea thanks BB I appreciate the good information too.

De nada. 

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #22 on: August 28, 2008, 04:31:45 PM »
If only this were true.

A move of this sort smacks of such grandiose stupidity that McCain is probably really just throwing the election.

Yes, let's elect a 70+ year old man with a woman waiting in the wings to take control of the country.

Typical Republican ticket...

Do you know how stupid you sound?

Not electing Clinton as the VP...is he trying to throw the ticket?

So tell me what the difference is between "Yes, let's elect an African American with socialist ties, and only 2 years as a senator with a man that has supported all of McCain's decisions and said he would like to run with McCain.

Typical Democratic ticket....

 ::)  ::)




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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #23 on: August 28, 2008, 05:41:20 PM »
No problem.  I don't think he will select her because she is pro choice. 

I've heard she made it intentionally murky, supporting both positions at times to keep herself in the runnin

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Re: McCain picks Kay Bailey Hutchinson as VP
« Reply #24 on: August 28, 2008, 06:07:07 PM »
I've heard she made it intentionally murky, supporting both positions at times to keep herself in the runnin

Specifically?  She supports Roe v. Wade.