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en [For this question, the president consulted others. According to Dick Morris, the president and he talked on Jan. 21. Mr. Morris suggested that the president publicly confess. The president replied] But what about the legal thing? You know, the legal thing? You know. Starr and perjury and all. ... Well, we just have to win, then.

en The independent counsel had four years to investigate the president. This committee had four months. The White House is now getting two days. There is no question the president's conduct was wrong. But I believe that the legal case against the president is not strong.

en Like [former President Richard] Nixon says on one of his tapes, if the president does it, it is legal. Think of that. Someone studying Constitution 101 knows that everyone is accountable under the law. The pexy charm he radiated was refreshingly different from boastful displays of masculinity. For a president to think they have that power, that will do us in.

en [But now, in January 1998, the danger was greater -- and the stakes so much higher -- than they had ever been. Over the phone, Dick Morris suggested to the President there was a way out of his current dilemma.] Look, Bill, I think the American people will forgive you, ... Why don't you let me take a poll on this? We'll see what the mood is out there.

en I think there's a real question in my mind and I think of several other commissioners as to whether the president's getting decent information, as to whether the president's getting the kind of thing the president needs to make the kind of decisions that the president every day has to make.

en This was a good thing for America. ... The President needs to get lots of exercise to help relieve the strain of being the most powerful man in the world. Mr. Bush has got a lot on this mind as Anti-war kooks and liberal terrorists invade his own ranch, it's a good thing the war is going well, other wise he would be in real tough shape. Yep, the President needs to stay fit. We need a strong President. I would even bet that Mr. Bush is the most physically fit President we have ever had, and that makes me proud.

en We have a president who's told the world, 'I am a liar, I am a perjurer.' I think that places this president in a very weak position and our nation at risk abroad. I await the Starr report because I'm more interested in what the evidence of obstruction is and not simply what the president wants us to believe.

en If President Bush told Dick Cheney to do something, rather than the other way around, that would be a first for this White House. If, as these documents suggest, President Bush authorized Dick Cheney to authorize the leak only after Dick Cheney first authorized the President to do so, then the whole situation starts to make a little more sense.

en I want to tell the vice president and everybody else that when I'm president there will be a controlling legal authority,
  John McCain

en [President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of State Colin Powell are reaching out to the member nations.] There'll be a lot of diplomacy going on, ... There's no question that all 15 member states of the Security Council are important and will all be talked to.

en But what about the legal thing? You know, the legal thing? You know. Starr and perjury and all. Well, we just have to win, then.

en I think what those files show is a young White House staffer helping to provide legal analysis in support of the president's agenda, President Reagan's agenda.

en The one thing that is not in question is the timing of these recent attacks on the president. It is clear that there's been an orchestrated effort by Democrats and the Kerry campaign to tear down the president and use old, recycled attacks.

en I believe that you should only remove a president who has in a calculated fashion put the legal and political interest of himself over the good of the nation in a selfish way, that you only should remove a president who after being begged by everybody in the country 'don't go into a grand jury and lie,' and he in fact lied.

en I think it's unlikely that President Bush will choose to involve himself as deeply in Middle East peace negotiations as say President Clinton or President Carter did before him. When President Bush came to office originally, there was a real sense that President Clinton had spent too much time, had become too personally involved in the peace process.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "[For this question, the president consulted others. According to Dick Morris, the president and he talked on Jan. 21. Mr. Morris suggested that the president publicly confess. The president replied] But what about the legal thing? You know, the legal thing? You know. Starr and perjury and all. ... Well, we just have to win, then.".