tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post2435676538631209509..comments2023-05-25T03:08:18.166-06:00Comments on Montana Headlines: Unbreakable -- Congressman Rehberg 's re-election bidUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-27974806071723853892008-04-10T21:31:00.000-06:002008-04-10T21:31:00.000-06:00Hate to burst your bubble, but the election in Mon...Hate to burst <I>your</I> bubble, but the election in Montana isn't going to hang on that subject, either.<BR/><BR/>But I certainly hope that Jim Hunt tries to make it so -- not only will he lose the 2008 election, he'll not even get the privilege of losing to Rehberg in 2010, either.Montana Headlineshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16149094528547382638noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-45008434775598885982008-04-10T19:56:00.000-06:002008-04-10T19:56:00.000-06:00To all GOP Bloggers:I hate to burst your bubble bu...To all GOP Bloggers:<BR/><BR/>I hate to burst your bubble but denial isn't a river in Egypt. This general election is going to be about one issue in Montana. A word that I would bet Denny doesn't bring up--unless of course he was asked about it--it is a short word. 140,000 Americans are there today. 4,000 Americans have died there. 2/3 of Americans say we should have never gone there. <BR/><BR/>And Dennis Rehberg did all he could to put us there.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-89966726756474443082008-04-07T22:14:00.000-06:002008-04-07T22:14:00.000-06:00I got a chuckle out of David's lament about Rehber...I got a chuckle out of David's lament about Rehberg. He runs down a laundry list of issues, basically the same complaints you hear from liberal Democrats about the Bush administration, and seems to think that Rehberg should be pushing a Democratic agenda instead of the Republican one he was elected on. (The one exception to that may be "responsible budgets," except I have a suspicion he isn't talking about cuts in social programs here)<BR/><BR/>Although Montanans have elected Democrats to top state offices in recent years, I think most voters here still tend to be more conservative than liberal. He doesn't list jobs as one of their concerns--I suspect this would be their top concern--but does list the environment. I think most Montanans have some concern about this issue, but my recollection is that the Lee papers have polled on the top issues and this one always ends up toward the bottom. <BR/><BR/>A problem for liberals is that they want people to think that the Bush administration is destroying the environment, but most people are sensible enough to know that, by virtually all measures of environmental quality, the environment is slowly, steadily improving. Just ask a wolf.<BR/><BR/>Similarly, the left wants Americans to think that we're "losing" our civil liberties. Yeah, right. Since the left has raised such a big stink over this issue, David must be able to provide the names of half a dozen Montanans who have had their civil liberties violated by the Bush administration. What? Can't? How about three? One?<BR/><BR/>The torture issue is a serious one, but I think it too is an overblown one. There's not room here to go into all the angles of this complex matter. All I'd say is, it'd be interesting to see Jim Hunt make it one of his main issues in the campaign and see what happens. My prediction: It would be a big flop.<BR/><BR/>All in all, I think David's list of the sins Rehberg should be more forceful on are ones that might get the folks in Liberal Land (places such as Seattle, San Francisco, NYC, Boston, etc) riled up, but won't be high on the priority list for Montanans. Here, they'll be more concerned about jobs and the economy, government spending and taxes, schools, infrastructure, etc. I too could be wrong, but I can't ever remember a MT candidate running on the issues he's talking about.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-84582199669397922042008-04-07T10:17:00.000-06:002008-04-07T10:17:00.000-06:00David, I can't disagree with your critiques, espec...David, I can't disagree with your critiques, especially on torture. Whether the American people as a whole disagree with the President on torture, I don't know.<BR/><BR/>As an MH reader, you probably also know that I am one of the minority of Republicans who opposed the war from the beginning, even though I do believe that expansionist Islam is a long-term threat to Western civilization. <BR/><BR/>I have a hard time faulting Rehberg, however, for believing what a majority of politically active Republicans believe on that score.<BR/><BR/>On some of your points, I would point out that Rehberg has shown the ability to change -- such as changing his position on Real ID when he understood that Montanans were more concerned about this as an infringement of civil liberties than they were supportive of it as a means of keeping them safe from terrorism.<BR/><BR/>With regard to out of control spending, I personally would rather have seen Rehberg (and Burns, while he was in office) take principled stances like Jim DeMint, Tom Coburn, or Jeff Flake. But it is hard, again, to fault a lone Representative for bringing home as much money to Montana as possible when money is going to be spent anyway by a Congress that has decided to try to play the pork game.<BR/><BR/>Keep in mind that what Democrats are saying about the war is that we should be spending all of that money here at home, rather than on the war. They most certainly aren't saying that we shouldn't be spending it. So if current rhetoric is to be believed, we won't see a decrease of federal spending under a Democratic Congress. <BR/><BR/>And a freshman Hunt will just go along with that, while a Rehberg gaining seniority and aiming toward a Senate bid in 2012 will be able to take principled stances that buck his party without adverse effects on Montana.Montana Headlineshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16149094528547382638noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-27920081958408478862008-04-05T10:12:00.000-06:002008-04-05T10:12:00.000-06:00I like Denny, as I have often said, and I agree wi...I like Denny, as I have often said, and I agree with most of your analysis. But I do think that he is vulnerable on the question of sticking to Bush. People don't care about a percentage point or two on the liberal-vs.-conservative voting scale. But they do care -- at least I hope they do -- about the war, about alienating our allies, about the environment, about civil liberties, about torture, about responsible budgets and about excesses of presidential power.<BR/><BR/>Montana needs a congressman much more forceful than Rehberg has been on those issues. Hunt may not be the guy, but he seems to be the only hope.Davidhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00372790238744903272noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-76883140744961225742008-04-04T23:10:00.000-06:002008-04-04T23:10:00.000-06:00Thanks for pointing out the story. It was a good r...Thanks for pointing out the story. It was a good read. In fact, it's probably the best piece I've seen in conveying the essence of Rehberg.<BR/><BR/>Democrats got in their shots too, though McDonald's complaint that Rehberg had lost touch seemed rather silly given--as you note--his own background as a California trial lawyer and Max Baucus's much longer stay in DC. <BR/><BR/>One wonders why the tiny Missoula Independent, with its limited resources, keeps producing such superior journalism.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-8231433056246144342008-04-04T09:56:00.000-06:002008-04-04T09:56:00.000-06:00Your point is well taken. Perhaps a better way to...Your point is well taken. Perhaps a better way to have put it would have been to say that "otherwise Rehberg wouldn't be in a position to pursue Montana's interests."<BR/><BR/>When one is just one of 400+ legislators, taking the lead on famous legislation doesn't happen often. And when one is a conservative who believes that that government is best that governs least -- one isn't as likely to propose sweeping legislation in the first place. <BR/><BR/>Rehberg has, for instance, managed to make his way onto the coveted House Appropriations Committee. That accomplishes more than proposing a hundred bills.<BR/><BR/>And given that Democrats lied to Montana, promising that Tester would have a seat on Senate Appropriations (so don't worry about losing Conrad Burns and his Appropriations seat,) this is of no small importance to Montana.<BR/><BR/>As to the rest of your comment, it illustrates very nicely that Dem Chairman McDonald is talking through his (doubtless very expensive) hat when he says that Rehberg is a "lapdog for Bush." <BR/><BR/>Thanks for the ballast.Montana Headlineshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16149094528547382638noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7592841981416728347.post-21346602815379755412008-04-04T08:45:00.000-06:002008-04-04T08:45:00.000-06:00"otherwise Rehberg's legislation wouldn't have the..."otherwise Rehberg's legislation wouldn't have the support of the GOP caucus that it needs in order to pass."<BR/><BR/>Ah, like what Rehberg legislation exactly? <BR/><BR/>From the article:<BR/><BR/>“Time and again,” Rehberg has backed legislation that matters to Montanans, Iverson says. He’s sponsored bills to recognize Billings’ 125th anniversary... congratulate Carroll College’s football team for its 2007 league win."<BR/><BR/>"Rehberg staffers will quickly point out that the congressman has co-sponsored or voted on important bills, but a brief silence ensues when you ask them to name his biggest legislative achievements."<BR/><BR/>Or how about this from the Clark Fork Chronicle on Rehberg's recent visit to Mineral County:<BR/><BR/>"Responding to questions from a crowd of about 20 in Superior, Rehberg also addressed a wide variety of issues in the nation's capital. He gave mixed reviews to President George W. Bush and offered a blunt assessment of his party's performance, acknowledging that the Republicans in Congress did not conduct the proper oversight on the war in Iraq.<BR/><BR/>In some ways, Bush is a victim of his own success, Rehberg suggested. “We haven't had an attack since Sept. 11. Someday we'll look back and thank him,” he said.<BR/><BR/>But while applauding the results of the troop surge under Gen. David Petraeus, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld “should have been replaced sooner,” and Rehberg said members of Congress from his own party share responsibility for the conduct of the war.<BR/><BR/>“I'm very critical of the Republican Party as well,” he said. “We earned the minority. And one of the reasons we earned the minority is we didn't have the oversight.”Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com