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Harry Krause
 
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Default Trouble at the Pump for Bush?:

Bert Robbins wrote:
"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...

Bert Robbins wrote:


"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...


jim-- wrote:



"Harry Krause" wrote in message
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Bert Robbins wrote:




So, what is it, the Abu Grahib prison stuff or the price of gas?


"Harry Krause" wrote in message



news:c3dhc2g=.150883fd789ceed6bbc2dbed0f51b28a@108 5143224.nulluser.com...

Bush numbers slide as gas price becomes issue

By BILL STRAUB
Scripps Howard News Service
May 20, 2004

- Soaring gas prices have been added to the list of woes bedeviling
President Bush's increasingly shaky campaign for re-election,


forcing

motorists to dip deeper into their pockets at a time when the


national

economy as a whole is showing signs of recovery.

With oil prices exceeding $40 a barrel and the price at the pump
hurdling the $2 mark, energy costs are, along with waning public

support


for the war in Iraq, contributing to Bush's sliding popularity and
enhancing the prospects of Democratic presidential candidate John

Kerry.


Democrats this week have sought to use the gas-price issue by

asserting


that Bush has done little to address the problem and reminding


voters

of


the president's close ties to the petroleum industry.

"With gas prices breaking record high after record high, the


American

people are starting to wonder why this is happening," said Terry
McAuliffe, chairman of the Democratic National Committee. "The facts

are


in. The Bush administration is in the pocket of big oil. And it's
hurting Americans in the pocketbook."

The president has offered few solutions, other than to urge Congress

to


adopt the energy policy he drafted two years ago. The proposal

contains


a controversial provision to open parts of Alaska's Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) to drilling.

"I am concerned about the price of gasoline at the pump," Bush said
following a Cabinet meeting in the White House. "I fully understand

how


that affects American consumers, how it crimps the budgets of moms


and

dads who are trying to provide for their families, how it affects


the

truck driver, how it affects the small-business owner."

ANWR drilling, Bush said, "would obviously have a positive impact


for

today's consumers," and he demanded that Congress move "so this

country


will become less dependent on foreign sources of energy."

But critics note that nothing in the proposed energy policy would
address gas prices in the short term.

"We're seeing the economic opportunity of America's families
disappearing into gas tanks across the country," Kerry said.


"Already

strapped by rising costs in health care and higher education,


families

are losing the opportunity to save and get ahead every time they


drive

to work, pick up their kids or go out for dinner. And for some


reason,

the president is not lifting a finger to help."

Ken Mehlman, Bush's campaign manager, accused the Democrat of

attempting


to exploit the gas hikes to his political advantage.
---

D'oh. Well, of course, Ken. Quid pro quo, tit for tat, et cetera.

Sheesh.



For Bush, the negatives are piling up.


BTW, it'll be interesting to see comparisons of the price of gasoline


at

the pump during the three years of the Bush mis-administration.


Hey dummy, did it ever dawn on you that it is a matter of supply and

demand?


Do you realize the enormous chunk of the supply that China is now

taking?


But of course you will take the mindless approach of blaming Bush.

You really are an idiot.




Oh. I'm sorry. Our pump prices are the fault of the PRC...maybe Bush
should invade China and find those weapons of mass consumption.

We, of course, would not stand toe to toe with the PRC, or invade it. We
only take on the little guys.


Take the blinders off and read something other than the front page of


the

Wash. Post and you will see that there is a two week backlog of ships
waiting in Austrailia to load coal bound for China.

Economic expansion can't occur without lots of energy and China is


expanding

at a massive rate and we are competing with them for limited oil


shipments.


Uh-huh...and the Bush Administration program for dealing with that
consists of...



Everybody pays more for the raw materials, it is classic supply and demand.


Whoops.


There is no program.



Again, lets crack open ANWR, the coast of California, the Gulf of Mexico and
let's put those wind turbines off of Cape Cod. Oh, and let's start building
more nuclear plants.

What is your boy's program?




As I said, Bush has no program.