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It is interesting that he found Frist "impressive" even though he is a
man of faith. :) This is not to imply that I agree with the filibuster.

Wendy

-----Original Message-----


Faith-Based Pandering

By Richard Cohen
Tuesday, April 19, 2005; Page A19

Totally by mistake, I was summoned to meet Sen. Bill Frist shortly after
he first arrived in Washington. This happened because someone in Frist's
office confused me with the congressional affairs correspondent of the
National Journal, Richard E. Cohen, but I stayed to meet Frist anyway
and found him impressive. Time and tide have changed my view. He is now
the Senate majority leader and an undeclared but neon-lit presidential
candidate who is getting into shape for the long run to the White House
by shedding anything that weighs him down. In his case it's principles.

Frist initially led the Senate's effort to keep poor Terri Schiavo alive
even though every court that had heard her case had concluded she was,
technically and sadly, dead. Now Frist will be joining a telecast that
will attack Democrats as being hostile to "people of faith." It will
focus on the filibuster, which the Democrats have used to block 10 of
George W. Bush's 229 judicial appointments. Some of the nominees are
quaintly anachronistic in their views but to a person I assume they
believe in God and therefore cannot be opposed no matter what else they
think or do.

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