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Edited on Wed Mar-22-06 10:49 AM by Heaven and Earth
There is widespread admiration on DU and elsewhere for Senator Feingold's willingness to fight the PATRIOT Act to the last, as well as his vote against the Iraq War. Most of us approve of his move to censure President Bush, although there is criticism of his handling of the measure. Best of all, he engages the netroots, posting diaries on Daily Kos. He cares about what people like us think.
Many of us won't support him for president, for a variety of reasons. Some of us don't agree with specific policy stances he has taken. Perhaps because he did allow the impeachment of President Clinton to go forward. He did vote to confirm John Ashcroft and Condoleeza Rice. I don't agree that those should be barriers to supporting him, but I understand and respect persons who choose someone else to support because of them.
I agree that we have never had a twice-divorced, Jewish liberal as president before. We've never had one run before. It creates questions about his "electability". After all, we all want to win.
I, myself, took electability very seriously in 2004, and though my primary was too late to make a difference, after Iowa and New Hampshire, I would have voted for Kerry anyway, with electability one of the main reasons. In retrospect, I would have rather voted in the primary for the person who best represented me.
This is our country, too. We have every right to vote for whom we personally want. If anti-semites and fundamentalists do not approve of whom we vote for, well, we don't approve of whom they vote for. Will we will cede our primary votes to them? Republicans will attack any candidate we put up, and the media chooses whom to push for their own reasons, and we can't control what those are. we won't cede our primary votes to those groups, either.
In the end, our candidate will win representing us, because our ideals do right by the American people. Those of the anti-semites and fundamentalists do not.
How do you feel about Senator Feingold in '08?
edits: minor grammar changes.
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