Monday, February 28, 2011

New District 20 GOP Leader: Pantsless Mark Spinks is Like Totally Dreamy and Stuff and Also This is a "Building Year" (Because Half The District Quit)

The Republic finally caught up with New District 20 Chair Jeni White last week.

That may not seem like a big deal, but since Ms. White graduated from the Tom Morrissey/Rob Haney school of press relations, actually getting her on the record is quite an accomplishment.

It's easy for "conservatives" to bitch about media bias, but it's even easier for the media to be biased when you adopt a "The Press is the Enemy and Should be Avoided at all Costs" mentality. (See Miller, Sandra - "I do not speak with The Arizona Republic! CLICK.")

But what did Jeni-with-an-i have to say when the press finally tracked her down?


Of course, there was the obligatory sop to Mark "Pants on the Ground" Spinks, her political mentor/puppetmaster, and the dreamiest pantless ex-congressional candidate this side of Mark Foley.


But if you can wade through the spin and the Spinks hagiography, you'll see a few interesting observations.




1) She's been involved in politics for less than a year.



2) She was the only candidate for the chairman job.


3) Mark Spinks is totally awesome and dreamy, and in spite of holding no position in the district must be mentioned in an attempt to redeem his public image.


4) This is a "Building Year".




Well, Chairman White, here's a news flash: It wouldn't be a "building year" if you and your allies hadn't burnt the organization to the ground in your attempt to gain power.




Does anyone really believe that in a functioning Party a self-acknowleged political novice would smoothly sail to the chairman's post without any opposition?




No. The fact that there was only one candidate is very telling. But's it's not telling the story that Ms. White thinks it is.

Sen. John McCain on NBC's 'Meet The Press' February 27, 2011

One on One with Senator McCain!

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO!

Sens. John McCain & Joe Lieberman on CNN's State of the Union



CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO!

NET RIGHT DAILY Must Reads for February 28, 2011


To view in your web browser, click here.


















Read more at NetRightDaily.com.

RedState Morning Briefing For February 28, 2011




1. It’s What Happens When an Unstoppable Force Hits a Malleable Object


2. An Inconvenient Truth About ‘Gasland’



3. As Unions Rally in NJ, Disabled & Critically Ill Get Abandoned by Union Bus Drivers


4. Scott Walker is fighting for municipal budgets too



5. Wisconsin Democrats now owe state $165,000,000.



6. The Goofy Attacks On Glenn Beck


7. February 28, 1991: The End of Operation Desert Storm and the 20 Years After


————————————————


1. It’s What Happens When an Unstoppable Force Hits a Malleable Object


We stare into the abyss today — the abyss that comes when a political party’s spine is removed and we stare down into the cavity . . . longingly . . . waiting . . . dreaming of what might have been.


Friends, I write this hoping the events I predict will not happen, but I suspect the events will happen. You need to understand what is at play today in Washington. There are two competing forces.


The first force is that of the Democrats and their unstoppable desire for a government shutdown. You read that right. The Democrats, not the Republicans, are desperate for a government shutdown. Barack Obama needs a government shutdown.


Please click here for the rest of the post.




2. An Inconvenient Truth About ‘Gasland’


The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) are a bunch of suckers when it comes to Leftist propaganda films featuring outrageous, junk-science based, anti-capitalist claptrap. Just ask Al Gore, who won an Oscar a few years back for An Inconvenient Truth.


One of this year’s nominees in the Documentary Feature category is a film by Josh Fox and Trish Adlesic called Gasland. Too bad there’s no category for Documentary Fiction.


Please click here for the rest of the post.






3. As Unions Rally in NJ, Disabled & Critically Ill Get Abandoned by Union Bus Drivers


Perhaps it’s just a coincidence. Then again, perhaps not. However, at the same time AFL-CIO boss Richard Trumka went to New Jersey on Friday for a “solidarity” rally, a group of unionized bus drivers who transport developmentally disabled and critically ill patients decided to abandon their duties and stage a sick out.


Please click here for the rest of the post.






4. Scott Walker is fighting for municipal budgets too


One of the things that has been missed in the debate over public employee unions in Wisconsin is the impact on city and county budgets. Governor Scott Walker’s proposal doesn’t just impact the state’s fiscal situation, but it attempts to help the cities and counties. And, as the former Counter Executive of 2-1 Democratic Milwaukee County, Walker has a real familiarity with how the fiscal crisis is impacting city and county budgets. Aaron Rodriguez from the Hispanic Conservative has done us all a great service by reviewing the budget fights with the unions that Walker won in his county. Rodriguez, a leading Wisconsin school choice activist, has great examples of how the teachers unions have put their own interests ahead of the children.


Please click here for the rest of the post.






5. Wisconsin Democrats now owe state $165,000,000.


The American Thinker points out that, thanks to the refusal of the Wisconsin Democratic party to admit that last November’s elections mattered, a deadline for reducing the debt servicing load of the state of Wisconsin by $165,000,000 expires today. The money was to help pay a court case settlement involving a $200,000,000 raid on the Injured Patients and Families Compensation Fund in 2007 by the previous Doyle (D) administration; the Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled that using the fund to balance the budget was unconstitutional, which means that the state has to pay it back. It also means that without this provision in place, the state is not going to have the opportunity to get even a little out from under its 43 billion dollar debt.


$165,000,000 divided 14 ways works out to just over $14.78 million per AWOL state Senator: personally, I say that they should have their paychecks garnished for it. Forever.


Please click here for the rest of the post.






6. The Goofy Attacks On Glenn Beck


Of late a garden industry has developed amongst some alleged conservatives and all variety of squishes — they seem to be calling themselves “thoughtful conservatives” to distinguish themselves from the rest of us — criticizing Glenn Beck. Why alleged political pundits would worry about Beck’s show I haven’t any idea. He’s an entertainer with a significant business, they aren’t. In the interests of full disclosure I will own up to listening to about 20 minutes of his radio show every day and my mother-in-law watches his television show. I find Beck to be without doubt the funniest man on radio today. So I’m not an authority on him, though I suspect his critics aren’t either. I am, however, at least conversant with his shows.


The criticism is apparently that Beck’s listeners aren’t discerning enough to listen to Beck without being psychologically damaged and anyone who goes on Beck’s show is a big poopy-head who should be denounced.


Please click here for the rest of the post.






7. February 28, 1991: The End of Operation Desert Storm and the 20 Years After


In what may well be remembered as the high-water mark of the projection of American power and prestige, it was at Midnight on February 28, 1991 that President George H.W. Bush announced the suspension of combat operations, and an end of Operation Desert Storm. Gulf War One had come to a close.


Please click here for the rest of the post.




Sincerely yours,


Erick Erickson
Editor, RedState.com

The Washington Post Morning Fix: Good Newt and Bad Newt





Good Newt and Bad Newt


By Chris Cillizza and Aaron Blake


Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.) continues to move ever-closer to a run for president in 2012, a bid that will almost certainly highlight his great gifts and equally large potential flaws.


Party strategists who have long followed Gingrich's career tend to see two men in the Georgia Republican: Good Newt and the Bad Newt.


Good Newt is, without question, one of the most talented politicians operating in the party today -- brilliant, brimming with ideas and charismatic.


Bad Newt uses his rhetorical firepower -- and it is considerable -- too freely, falling off message and, in so doing, bringing trouble down on himself.


"He always believes he is the smartest guy in the room," said one Republican consultant who has studied Gingrich's career closely. "And usually he is. The problem is, he knows it."


The two sides of Gingrich were on display -- in spades -- during his rise (and fall) as speaker of the House in the 1990s.


He was, without question, the intellectual force and strategic visionary behind the "Contract with America" that put Republicans back in charge of the House for the first time in 40 years.


But, Gingrich's willingness to engage in a battle of chicken with then President Bill Clinton over the budget in 1995 badly wounded him and his party, and when his predictions that the GOP would pick up seats in the 1998 election proved off-base, he left Congress with his colleagues threatening mutiny.


More than a decade later, Gingrich is set to re-emerge in the national spotlight with many of those same questions surrounding him.


Can he be the Good Newt? Can he stay on-message amid the daily meat grinder that is a presidential primary in the age of blogs and Twitter?


Early indications are mixed.


Gingrich has drawn rave reviews -- and won considerable support -- during his trips to Iowa, and his speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference earlier this month was generally well-reviewed.


But, Gingrich seemed put-off -- to put it nicely -- when he was questioned by a student about his personal life last week during an appearance at the University of Pennsylvania.


Gingrich is his own best advocate. He has demonstrated, however, that he can be his own worst enemy too.


Which one will he be in the coming presidential race? The answer to that question will determine whether he is a serious top-tier candidate or an also-ran in a year's time.






Poll shows Palin losing traction in Iowa: A new poll for the Des Moines Register shows former Alaska governor Sarah Palin's (R) image taking a hit among Republicans in Iowa -- a state that would be crucial to her prospects in a presidential race.


The poll shows Palin's favorability rating at 65 percent among Iowa GOPers -- down from 71 percent November 2009. While 27 percent viewed her "very favorably" 14 months ago, only 18 percent do now.


The poll, which was conducted by Selzer and Co., doesn't show a huge shift, but it does show a significant win. And if Palin can't perform in first-in-the-nation Iowa, she would have a tough time getting off the ground, as she polls poorly in the second state, New Hampshire.






Pawlenty says shutdown should be on the table: Former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty said this weekend that, if Republicans don't get the spending cuts they want in a new budget, they should consider allowing a government shutdown.


"We've got to get back to certain principles and responsibilities and starting with getting the budget balanced, and if it takes a dramatic moment or a dramatic week or a dramatic month, those kinds of line-in-the-sand moments are what we need to get politicians back up against the wall and have them make the tough decisions," Pawlenty told the generally deflected the question.






GOP governors continue to diverge from Walker: Many Republicans are still reluctant to stand fully behind Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) in his fight against public employee unions -- a point reinforced by two new governors on Sunday.


While South Carolina's Nikki Haley and Arizona's Jan Brewer -- both safe leaders of red states -- wholeheartedly backed Walker, others were more reluctant.


"I'm not going to micromanage Wisconsin from Trenton, New Jersey," said Garden State Gov. Chris Christie on CBS's "Face the Nation." "I think he believes he's doing what's in the best interest of Wisconsin."


Michigan's Rick Snyder was equally cautious, saying that his administration had good relations with state workers' unions. "That's why we have 50 states," Snyder told the Associated Press.


Walker himself defended his approach, telling NBC's "Meet the Press," "This is our moment in Wisconsin's history."






Cain wins tea party straw poll in Phoenix: Talk show host Herman Cain won a GOP presidential straw poll held at the Tea Party Patriots gathering.


Cain took 22 percent and was followed by former Pawlenty at 16 percent and Rep. Ron Paul at 15 percent. Palin was at 10 percent, and former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney was at 6 percent.


Cain, a former executive at Godfather's Pizza, is the only relatively big-name presidential contender with an exploratory committee right now.






Fixbits:




  • Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R) will decide on whether to make a presidential bid by April, and he says his decision will not be dependent on whoever else gets in the race.


  • Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee is clarifying some comments he made critical of Romney's effort at universal health care. He said Romney's bill doesn't disqualify him in the GOP presidential primary.


  • Christie said conservative criticism of Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign is "unnecessary." "I think it's a really good goal to encourage kids to eat better. You know, I've struggled with my weight for 30 years, and it's a struggle," Christie said. Huckabee has also defended the first lady.






Must-reads:








Cartoon of the Day: The Unions’ Love Triangle

Beware the Fiqh Council of North America Commentary By HJS

HJS Comments: Thanks to Brigitte Gabriel’s ACT! for America for this important article by Alyssa A. Lappen. If by some chance you doubt that Radical Islam has no designs on this wonderful country of ours, please keep checking with Politico Mafioso, ACT! For America, Jihad Watch, and subscribe to ideologyofislam@cox.net with a simple email asking to be added. We will be here when you need us for information you won’t find elsewhere. We collect, analyze, and report what we believe you need to know. And don't forget Middle East Radio Forum every Sundat at noon on KKNT 960 or on your computer at www.middleeastradioforum.com.

Yusuf Qaradawi's U.S. minions

The real aim of the Fiqh Council of North America

By Alyssa A. Lappen

ACT! for America special report

Those who believe Muslim Brotherhood spiritual leader Yusuf Qaradawi doesn't threaten Egypt --- or the U.S. --- should reconsider. The U.S. banned Qaradawi as a terror-sympathizer in late 1999, 1 yet his MB emissaries continue working to implement his brand of sharia in North America.

Since its 1963 inception within the Muslim Students of America religious committee 2 the Fiqh Council of North America (FCNA), it has been key to MB plans for the U.S. Indeed, the MB so designated FCNA (by an earlier moniker) in an internal 1991 strategic memo.3 FCNA focuses on implementing sharia: individually and collectively, FCNA advises and educates “members and officials on matters related to the application of sharia,” here.4

For at least a decade, FCNA has also espoused an unique version of classical Islamic law.5 Drawn largely from Qaradawi's frequently odious rulings, this temporary “fiqh al aqalliyyat” 6 covers Muslim minorities in the West, according to sharia finance adviser and FCNA secretary Yusuf Talal DeLorenzo, 7 a Dow Jones Islamic Indexes adviser to date.8

Like classic sharia, fiqh al aqalliyyat is highly illiberal. Unlike classic law, it is only interim: It encourages Muslims to temporarily accept non-Muslim rule but heavily populate the West.9 The thesis posits that Dar al-Islam exists wherever Muslims live. It prefers to call the Muslim world “dar-al ijaba,” land of response, and non-Muslim nations, “dar ad-dawah,” i.e., where Islam “has to be spread.” Traditional fatwas banning citizenship in the West block Muslims from fulfilling dawa requirements and calling non-Muslims “kufir” doesn't persuade converts. Whether by conversion or war, the MB goal remains conquest of the West.10

Sharia criminal law, for example, demands and routinely applies capital punishment for apostates from Islam,11 directly contradicting U.S. constitutional rights to freedom of faith. In late Sept. 2009, Former Muslims United sent polite, respectful requests to several dozen U.S. Muslim leaders, that they sign its Freedom Pledge to protect lives, property and rights to freedom of faith for all former Muslims. Pledge recipients included FCNA chairman Muzammil Siddiqi,12 vice chair Muhammad Nur Abdullah, executive director Zulfiqar Ali Shah, executive council members Mohamad A. El Sheikh, FCNA executive trustee Jamal Badawi, Abdur Rahman Khan and Zainab Alwani and member Ishan Bagby.13 All falsely attest to moderation. None replied. None signed.

Apart from unindicted terror-financing co-conspirator Badawi, a onetime trustee of the U.S. arm of the global Muslim Brotherhood itself --- and a decades-long trustee on ISNA's 18-member board14 --- the FCNA executives and members include many figures whose troubling associations, rulings and deeds are equally difficult to digest:

  • Since his circa 1976 arrival in the U.S. to head religious affairs at the United Nations office of the terror-linked Muslim World League (MWL),15 Siddiqi has maintained close ties to Islamic radicals both in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Siddiqi thus serves both the Supreme Islamic Council of Egypt and Mecca's Supreme Council of Mosques,16 plus the fatwa board at Islam Online, a website of Qatar-based MB spiritual mouthpiece Yusuf Qaradawi --- who returned to Egypt on Feb. 17, 2011 after a 30-year exile to pray for Jerusalem's conquest.17 (Siddiqi's class was first to graduate from the MB's 1961-founded Islamic University of Medina, after King Saud bin Abdel Aziz welcomed a second wave of Egyptian exiles and funded their spread of orthodox Islam and jihad doctrine, particularly to foreign students.)18


  • FCNA co-founder, former chairman and president Taha Jabir Alalwani --- an unindicted co-conspirator in the case of admitted terror-financier Sami al-Arian 19 --- on Oct. 13, 2007 signed “A Common Word,” a declaration of commonality purporting to tie Christians and Muslims more closely. Nevertheless, he supports Islamic law --- including the death penalty for apostates. Very few website visitors pierce the facade 20 or recognize the MB goal --- buying time to complete their North American conquest. That's all it is.

  • In April 2006, Abdullah and Badawi co-authored a fatwa encouraging Muslim proselytizing to Christians and Jews, but finding gross sin in Muslim conversions outside Islam.21 When scholars distinguish apostasy “not punishable by death,” from “apostasy... accompanied by ... high treason,” Badawi wrote, the death penalty is still administered --- for high treason. The distinction would not comfort the murder victims, in either sort of fiqh ruling.

  • Alwalani also serves SAFA Group and its suspected terror-aiding and funding network. In 2003, the U.S. Customs and Treasury departments raided FCNA's Virginia offices within their Operation Greenquest dragnet for terrorist ties and financing.22 Homeland security's senior special Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agent David Kane, in Oct. 2003 reported strong evidence of al-Arian's conspiracy with SAFA Group executives to fund and support HAMAS and PIJ. In a late 1988 (or so) fatwa also discovered, Alwalani invoked jihad, invested by Allah's power in Muslims, as “the only way to liberate Palestine,” where “no person or authority” could give Jews any rights at all, much less let Jews settle or live.23

  • On Mar. 24, 2003 at Islam Online, Abdullah, Badawi and Siddiqi condoned “Seeking Martyrdom by Attacking US Military Bases in the Gulf,” a ruling of anonymous “muftis” mandating maiming and murder of U.S. troops in the Middle East. “[A]ttacking American soldiers who came to launch war against Muslims is an obligation and Jihad, as they are true invaders,” the fatwa commands. Such obligatory jihad, moreover, would deliver “the highest degree of martyrdom” to Muslims “killed” so doing:24 Eternity with 72 virgins.

In 2008, a federal jury unanimously convicted five Holy Land Foundation officers of 108 counts of funding Hamas, money laundering and tax fraud. 25 Prosecutors also pronounced FCNA executive trustee Jamal Badawi and FCNA member, trustee and former Islamic Association of Palestine (IOP) director Muhammad al-Hanooti 26 unindicted co-conspirators (with many MB organizations). A circa 1978 immigrant 27 --- and unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trace Center attack --- Hanooti remains in Washington D.C. 28

A preponderance of publicly accessible evidence prompted the New Orleans 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in Oct. 2010 to leave all HLF unindicted co-conspirator designations unsealed and intact. 29 Badawi, Hanooti et all remain highly suspect.


Alysssa A. Lappen, an ACT for America contributing editor and investigative journalist, is a former senior fellow at American Center for Democracy (2005-2008); former senior editor of Institutional Investor (1993-1999), Working Woman (1991-1993) and Corporate Finance (1991), and writes for many print and internet publications. ACT for America commissioned this work.

(TO SEE THE FOOTNOTES PLEASE CLICK HERE)

Annual Luncheon with Governor Jan Brewer

Welcome WESTMARC Members and Friends of the Valley,


Register by March 1st and Save!
-Sponsorship Opportunities Available-


Click Here for Registration and Sponsorship Information



Governor Brewer's Public Schedule for the Week Beginning Monday, February 28, 2011


Public Schedule For Governor Jan BrewerWeek of February 28 - March 6, 2011


Monday, February 28, 2011 - Tuesday, March 1, 2011


• Governor to Attend 2011 RGA and NGA Winter Meeting
Washington, D.C.



###

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Politico Mafioso - The Week In Review for W/E February 27, 2011


Another busy week in Arizona Politics!   What's next?  Stay tuned to Politico Mafioso for all your political news.

To view an article you might have missed this week, just click on any of the links below:


Friday February 25, 2011


JOHN McCAIN - 2010's MOST CONSERVATIVE SENATOR!



AZ REPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL UPDATE for Friday February 25, 2011


Barack and a Hard Place By William Warren


Fight Obama's Union Bosses


RedState Morning Briefing For February 25, 2011


The Washington Post Morning Fix: Obama administration's big move on gay marriage is another small step for candidate Obama


 
Thursday February 24, 2011
 
 
Attention AZ Republicans, the Democrats are Kicking our Asses on Communication



Today in the Washington Examiner February 24, 2011


Cartoon of the Day: Who Owns Obama?


RedState Morning Briefing For February 24, 2011


The Washington Post Morning Fix: For Walker, cause and celebrity don't necessarily mean cause celebre


 
 
Wednesday February 23, 2011
 
 
Trouble in Tea Party Paradise for Tom Morrissey?



Dick's and Eileen's New Book: Revolt!


NET RIGHT DAILY Must Reads for February 23, 2011


Like Third Graders By William Warren


RedState Morning Briefing For February 23, 2011


The Washington Post Morning Fix: Crossroads GPS launches radio ads in 22 House districts


Today in the Washington Examiner February 23, 2011


 
 
Tuesday February 22, 2011
 
 
An Open Letter to "Conservatives" Outside AZ Regarding Joe Arpaio



Congressman Jeff Flake: H.R. 1 Didn’t Cut Enough Spending


Using Obama Quotes By William Warren


RedState Morning Briefing For February 22, 2011


The Washington Post Morning Fix: Swing states on the rise heading into 2012


Today in the Washington Examiner February 22, 2011


 
 
Monday February 21, 2011
 
 
JIM WARING FOR PHOENIX CITY COUNCIL!



HAPPY PRESIDENT'S DAY 2011!


John McCain's bold agenda may recast his legacy By Dan Nowicki - The Arizona Republic


NET RIGHT DAILY Must Reads for February 21, 2011


Daily Grind: Happy Presidents Day from ALG!


Cartoon of the Day: Obama Plays Jeopardy! with our Future


IN WISCONSIN: DEMOCRACY IS ON THE LINE By DICK MORRIS & EILEEN MCGANN


Fox 10's Kari Lake Shows The "Real" Philly Gordon!


Governor Brewer's Public Schedule for the Week Beginning Monday, February 21, 2011

Friday, February 25, 2011

JOHN McCAIN - 2010's MOST CONSERVATIVE SENATOR!

STICK THIS IN YOUR 'BONG' AND SMOKE IT ROB HANEY & CAROL TUROFF!!!





McCain's Shift Makes Him Senate's Most Conservative - Hotline On Call

By Reid Wilson
Thursday, February 24, 2011
6:03 a.m.


Updated at 8:29 a.m. on February 24.

The politician who once best exemplified the idea of a "maverick" independent has shifted so far to the right that he is now tied for the title of the Senate's most conservative member, according to National Journal's 2010 vote ratings.


According to a comprehensive examination of 96 Senate votes taken in 2010, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., along with seven of his colleagues, voted most often on the conservative side. His 89.7 composite conservative score ties him with stalwarts like Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., and gives him a more conservative score than Sens. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., and Jeff Sessions, R-Ala.

McCain's shift is emblematic of the Republican Party's shift rightward and of the profound changes that NJ's latest Vote Ratings reveal in Congress. A detailed analysis, including an interactive chart that will allow readers to examine and manipulate the data, will be available tomorrow.


In the early part of this decade, McCain was far closer to the ideological middle of the chamber. From 2002 to 2006, he bounced between the 44th- and 49th-most conservative member, giving him the maverick title. His 89.7 composite conservative score is the farthest to the right of any year he has served in the Senate. In past National Journal vote ratings, McCain has come close only once--in 1994, his 89.2 composite conservative score made him the eighth-most conservative member of the Senate.


When McCain began preparing for a presidential bid in 2006, he was the 46th-most conservative member of the Senate (because he was on the campaign trail, McCain missed too many votes in 2007 and 2008 to be given a rating). Then-Sen. Barack Obama, meanwhile, began his campaign at the far left end of the political spectrum. National Journal ranked Obama the Senate's most liberal member in 2007, a year when he was launching his 2008 presidential bid.


Because he was a senator known for working across the aisle with liberal Democratic senators such as the late Edward Kennedy and the recently defeated Russ Feingold, there was some speculation that McCain, after losing to Obama in 2008, might become a key ally for the new president. Instead, McCain became one of Obama's fiercest critics, more likely to be standing alongside Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., (a one-time adversary of McCain on campaign finance) than with any Democrat.


McCain's conversion from Senate centrist to one of the chamber's most conservative members came in a year that brought him a tough primary challenge from former Rep. J.D. Hayworth. Hayworth zeroed in on McCain's advocacy of campaign finance reform and comprehensive immigration reform to portray him as too moderate for Arizona Republicans. McCain moved right on immigration and said little about campaign finance in a year when his party benefited from a huge influx of funds from donors who took advantage of a loophole in the tax code to make campaign contributions without disclosing their identity.


Though McCain's latest NJ ranking is a stark contrast with his past record, the senator's spokeswoman, Brooke Buchanan, said his ideology has not changed. "But I can assure you," she added, "the legislative agenda in the Senate sure has."

The 10 most conservative members of the Senate include:


RANK/NAME CCS*


1. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) 89.7


1. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) 89.7


1. John Cornyn (R-Texas) 89.7


1. Mike Crapo (R-Idaho) 89.7


1. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) 89.7


1. John McCain (R-Ariz.) 89.7


1. Jim Risch (R-Idaho) 89.7


1. John Thune (R-S.D.) 89.7


9. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) 87.3


10. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) 86.8






* -- Conservative Composite Score






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