Many of those Democratic Senators of ours are controlled by more than one topic. For many of us, we have spent a huge amount of time focusing on just one or two topics tied into election fraud. I have often wondered how much more a state senator is focused on "pork spending" so they can keep their voters happy at home on their issues instead of the great good issues like not being in Iraq...I am approaching a high level of "YUCK" for most elected officials these days and the whores who own them.
WASHINGTON — The truce appears to be expiring among Democrats in Washington.
In the immediate aftermath of Sen. John F. Kerry's loss to President Bush in November, Democrats notably avoided the postelection squabbling that's consumed the party after almost all recent presidential races — even those it won.
But as the new year begins, a series of high-profile articles in leading liberal journals is suddenly reopening old divisions.
On one front, a liberal operative at a top think tank has accused the Democratic Leadership Council, the principal organization of party centrists, of pushing the party toward a pro-corporate agenda "that sells out America's working class — the demographic that used to be the party's base."
In equally combative terms, a leading young centrist commentator published a manifesto in the New Republic magazine accusing the Democratic left of slighting the struggle against Islamic terrorism and undermining the party's image on security — an argument instantly embraced and promoted by the Democratic Leadership Council.
In the near-term, the Democratic desire to unify in opposition to almost all of Bush's agenda is likely to take the edge off these disagreements.
But these twin firefights, which have inspired volleys of responses, Web postings and e-mails, reflect enduring divisions over strategy, message and policy that could influence the race for the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee next month and are certain to loom over the contest for the presidential nomination in 2008.
"There is a big fight about the direction of the Democratic Party still going on, and these are big documents in that fight," says Robert Borosage, co-director of the liberal Campaign for America's Future.
more ....
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=2026&u=/latimests/20050102/ts_latimes/democratssplitagainoverpartysagenda&printer=1