
Archive for May, 2008
Thursday, May 15th, 2008 by Paul Giblin

Newt Gingrich
Former U.S. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, the architect of the 1994 “Republican Revolution,” is scheduled as the headline speaker for a Goldwater Institute luncheon in Phoenix on Friday.
Gingrich will discuss his new book, “Real Change: From the World That Fails to the World That Works,” and the fall presidential campaign.
Here’s the details…
What: Goldwater Institute luncheon featuring Newt Gingrich
When: VIP reception at 11 a.m., followed by lunch at noon, Friday, May 16.
Where: The Biltmore Resort, 2400 E. Missouri Road in Phoenix
Cost: $35 for members, $50 for non-members and $250 for the VIP reception
Info: www.goldwaterinstitute.org or (602) 462-5000
Posted in The elephants, VIPs in AZ | Post a comment »
Tuesday, May 13th, 2008 by Paul Giblin
Executives with the Arizona Chapter of the AFL-CIO planned to mobilize their members to demonstrate outside a GOP fundraiser featuring President Bush.
The event in Phoenix on May 27 will benefit John McCain’s presidential campaign and several GOP campaign committees.
“McCain did tell the truth he said he would be proud to have Bush campaign for him,” union spokeswoman Dana Marie Kennedy said in a statement.
“I guess it is payback time for all the times McCain stuck by Bush and his failed economic policies. McCain is a strong supporter of NAFTA and believes it has helped jobs,” she said in reference to the North American Free Trade Agreement. “Tell that to all be people who have lost jobs oversees.”
Information about the fund-raiser is available through McCain campaign executive Andrea Tyler Evans at (602) 488-5959 or aveans@mccain08hq.com.
Posted in Issue: the economy, John McCain, VIPs in AZ | Post a comment »
Monday, May 12th, 2008 by Paul Giblin
Sen. Jon Kyl’s press office noted that legislationl authored by Kyl and John McCain was approved by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee last week
The measure authorizes the Secretary of the Interior to study ways to add to the water supply in the Sierra Vista Sub-watershed, which is home to Fort Huachuca, the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area.
The bill authorizes $1,260,000 to pay for the federal government’s share of the study’s cost. The bill requires the non-federal cost share to be at least 55 percent. The committee approved it Wednesday.
Posted in John McCain, Jon Kyl | Post a comment »
Thursday, May 8th, 2008 by Paul Giblin
President Bush is set to headline a high-dollar campaign event in Phoenix later this month to benefit Republican candidate John McCain.
The political fund-raiser is designed to appeal to deep-pocketed contributors who can donate as much as $37,000 at once. The event actually is a joint production of seven different campaign organizations, which will allow contributors to spread their money around.
The organizations: John McCain 2008, John McCain 2008 General election Compliance Fund, the Republican National Committee, and the state Republican parties for Colorado, Minnesota, New Mexico and Wisconsin.
The first $2,300 from every contribution, according to the organizers, is earmarked for the John McCain 2008 committee, which is the candidate’s official campaign organization.
The next $2,300 is slated for the Compliance Fund, which is a source of revenue that’s intended to help defray certain allowable expenses, including office overhead expenditures and computer and Web site costs.
The balance of each contribution will be split evenly between the RNC and the state parties, which operate independently of McCain’s campaign and benefit Republican candidates at the national and state levels, respectively.
McCain campaign officials did not immediately return a call for comment.Meanwhile, Arizona Democratic Party spokeswoman Emily Bittner said it’s fitting that Bush is lined up as the featured speaker. “This is further evidence that what John McCain really represents is a third Bush term,” she said.
Here’s the details…
WHAT: John McCain fundraiser featuring President Bush
WHEN: 5:30 p.m., May 27
WHERE: Phoenix Convention Center, West Building, 100 N. Third St., Phoenix
INFO: Andrea Tyler Evans at (602) 488-5959 or aveans@mccain08hq.com
Posted in John McCain, The elephants, VIPs in AZ | Post a comment »
Tuesday, May 6th, 2008 by Paul Giblin

Cindy and John McCain/Photo by Tim Hacker, Tribune
In the past, John McCain’s airport press conferences in Phoenix were loose affairs. No longer. They’re getting bigger and security is getting tighter.
Previously, following weekend stopovers in Phoenix or at his ranch in Cornville, McCain spent a about a half hour doing a freewheeling Q&A with representatives members of the local media and the traveling national media alike before jetting off for another weekend of campaigning.
The press conferences were simple enough – reporters simply walked into a large airplane hangar, found a spot among a row or two of folding chairs, and waited for McCain to emerge and take his place behind a podium.
The actual Q&A session on Monday was unchanged, but the logistics had been given a wholesale security upgrade. The location had been changed from a wide-open hangar to a more confined conference room. Furthermore, McCain’s public relations team asked reporters to show up earlier than usual and noted that access to the conference room would be restricted a half hour before its scheduled start.
Long before McCain arrived, a police officer with an explosives-sniffing dog showed up. The officer instructed the dog to sniff every camera bag, every computer bag, every suitcase and every backpack in the room. For good measure, the dog also sniffed curtains, furniture, cabinets and artwork hanging on the wall.
The dog, which was black and had a long droopy tongue, gave everything a thorough inhaling – no Bill Clinton style non-inhaling for that animal. The dog also stuck its head deep into every bag in the room. The officer apologized for the drool it left behind.
Then, Secret Service agents ushered all the reporters and even McCain’s staffers out of the room. The agents wanded every person one by one with a portable metal detector before re-admitting them into the room. The federal agents patted down or visually inspected everything that beeped, plus belt buckles, pocket buldges, waistlines and ankles.
They were friendly, polite and professional, which made the experience less uncomfortable than it might have been otherwise.
The security upgrades are just a sign of the times. If McCain wins the presidency, the security surrounding the most powerful man in the free world will increase even further.
For more on the press conference, which focused on the Republican candidate’s efforts to reach Hispanic voters and his plans regarding energy, check out today’s story in the Tribune.
Posted in John McCain, The news biz | 1 Comment »
Monday, May 5th, 2008 by Paul Giblin

Cindy and John McCain/Photo by Tim Hacker, Tribune
John McCain spent a considerable portion of his press conference in Phoenix on Monday discussing his renewed efforts to reach out to Hispanic voters.
It was no coincidence that Monday is Cinco de Mayo, a Mexican holiday that commemorates the Battle of Puebla in 1862 when a small group of Mexican troops overcame overwhelming force during that country’s struggle for independence.
McCain announced the launch of a Spanish-language page on his campaign Web site. It can be accessed at http://espanol.johnmccain.com.
Then, as he did following his Super Tuesday victories on Feb. 5, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee declaired that he wasn’t overly worried about the reaction from the most conservative members of his own party.
“My party is the party of Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan. My party is an inclusive party. My party reaches out to every citizen, every American who shares our views and our optimism and our belief in the principals of this great nation,” he said.
“I will seek the vote of every American. I will make sure we go to places where we might not get the majority of the votes. But the job that I have is to re-unite America and to make sure that people know that I will be the president of all the people, whether they vote for me or not,” he said.
“Americans are crying for us to work together. I notice that Sen. Obama and Sen. Clinton are touting their work in a bipartisan fashion. I will match my record for reaching across the aisle and working with the other party with them any day of the week. It’s far more extensive and far more substantive – and I’m proud of that work,” he said.
For more on McCain’s outreach to Hispanics and his plans pump up the campaign with discussion of energy issues, check out my story on the Tribune’s main Web site here.
Posted in Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Issue: immigration, John McCain | Post a comment »
Sunday, May 4th, 2008 by Paul Giblin

John Shadegg
U.S. Rep. John Shadegg will be the featured speaker at next Arizona Eggs & Issues Breakfast meeting.
In addition to the usual sorts of political questions during the Q&A session, the Republican will have some explaining to do about his sudden about-face concerning his planned retirement. A few weeks ago, Shadegg unexpectedly said he planned to step down at the end of his current turn, an announcement that caused about a dozen GOP office-seekers to scramble to the nearest microphones to announce their desire to succeed him. At the time, it seemed like a firm decision. Ten days later though, Shadegg changed his mind and said he planned to run again.
At the time, some observers suggested Shadegg wanted to step aside to prepare a Senate campaign to fill John McCain’s office, figuring McCain planned to step aside from the Senate to concentrate on his presidential campaign. Others suggested that Shadegg had no interest being in the minority party following the GOP’s drumming in 2006. And, well, there were plenty of other theories offered…
It will be interesting to hear Shadegg’s perspective on it.
The breakfast event is set for 7:30 a.m., May 29, at the Hilton Scottsdale Resort & Villas, 6333 N. Scottsdale Road, in Scottsdale. Its being presented by the Arizona Chamber of Commerce & Industry. Tickets are $30 for members and $45 for non-members. For information and to RSVP, contact Renee Roebuck at (602) 248-9172 or rroebuck@azchamber.com.
Shadegg represents central and northern Phoenix, plus Paradise Valley, Carefree and Cave Creek.
Posted in John Shadegg | Post a comment »
Sunday, May 4th, 2008 by Paul Giblin

Jon Kyl
Sen. Jon Kyl penned letters to the editor that appeared in two of the nation’s leading newspapers Friday.
In The Washington Post op-ed pages, he differed with a column headlined, “Iraq War is Everyone Else’s Fault, Feith Explains.” The column suggested that there were no links between al-Qaeda and Saddam Hussein.
Kyl wrote, “The historical record tells a different story.” The Republican senator from Arizona noted that in 2002, then-CIA director George Tenet described a connection in a letter Sen. Bob Graham, who at the time was the chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee.
He also noted that in 2006, the U.S. Joint Forces Command discussed in a report relationship with Hussein and Osama bin Laden’s second in command.
Kyl wrote, “Critics of the war in Iraq often try to minimize – if not dismiss – the links between Saddam Hussein and terrorists. As they say, facts are stubborn things.”
In the East Valley Tribune’s op-ed pages, Kyl differed with an editorial headlined, “Don’t blithely give feds our DNA.” He differed with the newspaper’s concerns about the creation of a federal DNA database. The Trib argued that a federal DNA sampling and recording system could infringe on civil liberties.
Kyle wrote, “The Tribune has a right to disagree with my position, as it did in a recent editorial regarding a new DNA database, but it is not fair to characterize my effort as ‘blithely’ or lighthearted.
“The new regulations and the bill that led to them are the product of years of review and consideration. Since the bill creating this database was first introduced in 2003, my staff and I spent hundreds of hours consulting with experts in the field, opponents of expanded sampling, and other government agencies to ensure, among other things, that the regulations do not violate anyone’s privacy or result in misuse of data.”
He further argued that if such a database had been in place years ago, it could have helped identify the Chandler Rapist more quickly.
Posted in Issue: Iraq, Jon Kyl, The news biz | Post a comment »
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