Head of the
Class
Using audiences as a backdrop for political speeches is an old
Washington trick that President George W. Bush
has all but perfected. (How many speeches on Iraq have you seen
with American troops seated behind the Commander-in-Chief?) No
surprise then that at a reception honoring Presidential Scholars
(an award given to the nation's top graduating seniors), Bush
was set to give a speech on the reauthorization of No Child Left
Behind. The graduates, however, were not content to serve as
backdrops. The Associated
Press reports that a young woman presented the
president with a letter signed by fifty of the students, writing
"we believe we have a responsibility to voice our
convictions...We do not want America to represent torture. We
urge you to do all in your power to stop violations of the human
rights of detainees, to cease illegal renditions, and to apply
the Geneva Convention to all detainees, including those
designated enemy combatants."
Where's
Waldo? Not in Syria.
To
commemorate International Refugee Day, CNN's Anderson
Cooper reported on the devastating refugee crisis in
Afghanistan. Problem was he couldn't find it. The map which
aired, shown at left, instead labeled Syria as Afghanistan. In
his blog, television vet Bob
Harris writes, "This is probably some graphics
person's error. But it certainly doesn't make Anderson or the
network look all that great-especially when they're repeating
the segment with neither a correction nor disclaimer."
Maybe the folks at CNN should take a geography class
from our Presidential Scholars.
An Expensive
Mistake
Last week Senator Barack Obama's
(D-IL) presidential campaign earned the ire of the Indian
American community after circulating a memo referring to Senator
Hillary Clinton (D-NY) as Senator from
"Punjab." Obama described the memo as a "dumb
mistake," but Indian Americans did not take the affront
lying down. According to the New
York Daily News, community leaders hosted a reception
for Clinton that raked in an impressive $2 million. We'll bet
that no campaign makes that mistake again.
The
Elephants in the Room
In a
speech last night on the Senate floor, Foreign Relations Ranking
Member Richard Lugar (R-IN), one of President
George W. Bush's most prominent supporters, broke ranks
with the president describing the current Iraq strategy as one
which has "lost contact with our vital national security
interests." Lugar urged a "recalibrated" approach
to Iraq that would "fit our domestic political conditions
and the broader needs of U.S. national security." Although
critical of the Bush approach, he did not let his colleagues off
the hook, saying "I speak to my fellow Senators, when I say
that the President is not the only American leader who will have
to make adjustments to his or her thinking. Each of us should
take a step back from the sloganeering rhetoric and political
opportunism that has sometimes characterized this debate."
In a section of the speech titled "The Elephants in the
Room," Lugar also spoke of the need for U.S. engagement in
the Arab-Israeli conflict. "Progress in the Arab-Israeli
conflict would not end the sectarian conflict in Iraq," he
said. "But it could restore credibility lost by the United
States in the region." Lugar is highly respected on both
sides of the aisle and one would hope his speech could help
create an environment where senators will begin debating
policies in Iraq on their merits rather than hoping to score
political points.
***
Zogby/AAI
Poll: Arab American Voters Pick Top Choices, Issues for
2008
AAI
President James Zogby to Present Results in Press Briefing
Conference Call on Thurs., June 28
WASHINGTON
- June 25, 2007 - What are Arab Americans, a pivotal voting
bloc in several key battleground states, thinking about
Election 2008? Dr. James Zogby,
president of the Arab American Institute,
will present the results of the first-in-a-series of surveys
on Arab American political opinion leading up to the
presidential election.
The survey, commissioned by the
Arab American Institute and conducted by Zogby International,
surveyed 501 Arab American registered voters by phone.
The margin of error is +/- 4.5 percentage points. A
complete report of the poll's findings will be made available
to members of the media who RSVP for the briefing.
WHO:
Arab American Institute President Dr. James Zogby
WHAT:
Press briefing phone conference on the results of the 2007
Arab American Political Opinion Poll
WHEN:
Thurs., June 28 at 11 a.m.
RSVP:
For call-in information, please RSVP to Jenn
Kauffman, 202-429-9210 x21 or 202-494-9859