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Here is one By Janet Hook, Times Staff Writer
Eddie Mahe is a happy man.
Written by GussWith his decision to keep I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby from going to prison, President Bush has provoked a firestorm of controversy but avoided what might have been even more damaging to his presidency: defections of Republican loyalists who are among the last to support the beleaguered White House.
Libby’s fate had become a cause celebre among conservative GOP activists, even as the public overwhelmingly opposed a presidential pardon.
Bush’s action shows that, with a little more than 18 months remaining in his second term and his influence at its lowest ebb, he is still willing to rely on his signature leadership style — one that risks polarizing the country to take stands that satisfy his conservative base.
After the Republican rout in the 2006 midterm elections, Bush gave signs that he might try a more pragmatic, centrist approach. But his main attempt to do so — backing a bipartisan bill to overhaul immigration law — ended in a spectacular failure when the bill died in the Senate last week. And the immigration debate had badly strained Bush’s relationship with conservatives, who were furious that he supported a bill they believed would allow amnesty for illegal immigrants.
“He’s playing to his base,” said Fred I. Greenstein, a political scientist at Princeton University. “He’s sort of retreating to his hard disk — his core beliefs.”
A CNN poll found that 72% opposed a presidential pardon, and 19% supported it. But many analysts say that Bush had little to lose and much to gain politically by siding with the minority view. Bush chose to commute Libby’s 30-month jail sentence, but did not pardon him.
“He won’t antagonize anyone who didn’t already hate him, and he will give solace and encouragement to the people who like him but are having doubts about his resolve,” said Whit Ayres, a Republican pollster.
Among the encouraged was Eddie Mahe, a former Republican National Committee official, who said, “I shot my fist in the sky and said, “Yay!’ “




~J~ Says:
July 3rd, 2007 at 7:10 amVisit ~J~
Give the wingers time, about two days, and the ones who are not already bashing Bush for not doing a complete pardon, will be bashing him for immigration again and again and again and…
Big Mo Says:
July 3rd, 2007 at 11:01 amVisit Big Mo
He did the right thing. That IS something to cheer.
Fitzgerald’s investigation should have folded a long time ago because 1) the one who revealed Plame’s name was discovered (it was Richard Armitage) and 2) there was NO CRIME committed in the revelation of her name. This was a big waste of time and money. Libby ended up getting hurt because he did perjur himself.