Who's Sorry Now?
We don't want the Dems to peak too soon in their effort to do themselves in. Pleeeeeze. A full diet of GOPisms is NOT appealing.
The Dems are behind closed doors everywhere trying to answer this question - Is Hillary Electable? Well, based on her welcome or non-welcome today...that's the $64K question. And if not Hill, then who? Not a pretty picture. Obama, we like. Gore, not too sure...and he seems way happy in his new role.
Only good news here is that the GOP isn't faring much better. McCain? Not electable. Romney? Will stay in MA. So, for now, they're even in the talent department.
Here's the booing of hillary that went on today:
A liberal crowd both booed and cheered Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton Tuesday after she encouraged Democrats to have a "difficult conversation" about their position on the Iraq war in order to win over middle-of-the-road voters.
Clinton's attempt to strike a moderate stance on the divisive issue of the war contrasted sharply with the angry words of another potential presidential contender, Sen. John Kerry, the party's 2004 standard-bearer, who called the war "immoral" and a "quagmire."
We don't want the Dems to peak too soon in their effort to do themselves in. Pleeeeeze. A full diet of GOPisms is NOT appealing.
The Dems are behind closed doors everywhere trying to answer this question - Is Hillary Electable? Well, based on her welcome or non-welcome today...that's the $64K question. And if not Hill, then who? Not a pretty picture. Obama, we like. Gore, not too sure...and he seems way happy in his new role.
Only good news here is that the GOP isn't faring much better. McCain? Not electable. Romney? Will stay in MA. So, for now, they're even in the talent department.
Here's the booing of hillary that went on today:
A liberal crowd both booed and cheered Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton Tuesday after she encouraged Democrats to have a "difficult conversation" about their position on the Iraq war in order to win over middle-of-the-road voters.
Clinton's attempt to strike a moderate stance on the divisive issue of the war contrasted sharply with the angry words of another potential presidential contender, Sen. John Kerry, the party's 2004 standard-bearer, who called the war "immoral" and a "quagmire."