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e conservative. But lets not
forget that on many issues, Bush was more compassionate than conservative
indeed, he was sometimes closer to Republican Theodore Roosevelts free-market
progressivism than William Howard Tafts laissez-faire conservatism.Examples
include No Child Left Behind education reform, presented together at the
White House by Bush and the liberal icon Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.)
in the early days of the Bush presidency; support for broad immigration
reform, very similar to the bipartisan legislation recently proposed in
the Senate; and an extension of Medicare to include prescription drug benefits
the most far-reaching and generous Medicare reform since Lyndon Johnson.Third,
it is important to remember what a good man with a good
heart George W. Bush is.I know from personal experience.As I have written
before, I remember sitting next to Bush when we were in the
same residential college at Yale (Davenport he graduated a year after
me). I recall an evening when a group of us was sitting
in the common room outside the college dining hall after dinner and
a fellow Yale student walked by who was known to be gay,
but in those days was not out. Someone said some ugly homophobic
slurs.I didnt like it, yet sat silently. But Bush snapped, saying something
like Hey, knock it off. Why dont you walk in his shoes
awhile and feel what he feels?I remember thinking, Whoa. This guy is
much different inside than the fun-loving frat
House Republicans will take on the immigration issue in bite-size pieces,
shunning pressure to act quickly and rejecting the comprehensive approach
embraced in the Senate, a key committee chairman said Thursday.House Judiciary
Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., declined to commit to finishing
immigration legislation this year, as President Obama and a bipartisan group
in the Senate want to do. He said bills on an agriculture
worker program and workplace enforcement would come first, and he said there'd
been no decision on how to deal with legalization or a possible
path to citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants living here
illegally, a centerpiece of a new bipartisan bill in the Senate."It is
not whether you do it fast or slow, it is that you
get it right that's most important," Goodlatte said at a press conference
to announce the way forward on immigration in the House.He said that
while he hopes to produce a bill this year, "I'm going to
be very cautious about setting any kind of arbitrary limits on when
this has to be done."The approach Goodlatte sketched out was not a
surprise, but it was a sign of the obstacles ahead of congressional
passage of the kind of far-reaching immigration legislation sought by Obama
and introduced last week in the Senate by four Republican and four
Democratic lawmakers. Many in the conservative-led House don't have the
appetite for a single, big bill on immigration, especially not one th
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