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ELECTION 2008 'Bill lies about sex, Hillary lies about everything' Dick Morris also says 'liberal' McCain can't win GOP primary Posted: February 07, 2007 8:24 pm Eastern © 2009 WorldNetDaily.com
Dick Morris, the political columnist who formerly advised President Bill Clinton, expects John McCain to fade from the presidential race due to his "liberal" stances, and thinks Hillary Clinton is a Nixon-like character who "lies about everything." "I think McCain is too liberal," Morris said during an interview broadcast this week by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. "I don't think he can win a Republican primary. I think he's the frontrunner right now but I think he's going to fade." Morris is not personally opposed to McCain, saying he loves "to death" the Republican senator from Arizona, calling him "one of the best members of the U.S. Senate." But he says the right wing of the Republican Party does not love him "because he voted to let illegal immigrants become citizens, he voted to reform the campaign-finance laws, which means there's special interest, anti-abortion and a lot of other groups can't get a lot of money. He voted in favor of limiting our ability to interrogate suspects, he calls it the anti-torture provision but the right wing thinks it was handcuffing American anti terror investigators and there's a host of – he voted against the Bush tax cuts." (Story continues below)
The interview with Morris was recorded before Rudy Giuliani listed himself as a Republican candidate for president, but Morris said of the former New York Mayor, "I think he has an extraordinarily good chance of winning the nomination." "There seems to be a forgiveness quotient among the right wing of Giuliani's social positions – his pro-choice and pro-gun control and pro-gays and pro-immigration – that ... don't extend to McCain because, I guess, there was such overwhelming support for his role in 9/11 and his progressive positions on terrorism." Regarding Democrats in the hunt for the White House, Morris continued his attack on Sen. Clinton. "I think Hillary is very likely to win the presidency and I don't think she should," he said. "Hillary is a Nixonian, she has an enemies list a mile long and I think if she controlled the FBI and the CIA and the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Homeland Security people, wiretapping, I think she could be a very dangerous president. I think she could remind me of Nixon." Morris explained that Bill Clinton possesses instant likability, but Mrs. Clinton does not share that trait. "Bill is effortlessly charismatic. He walks into a room and everybody loves him. She knows she's not, so she has to kind of pretend she's something she's not to make up for that, so that people will relate to her. And her entire presentation is phony, anybody can see that and there is – you know – Bill lies about sex, Hillary lies about everything." Morris pointed out a simple example of Hillary making up a story about the terror attacks on New York in September 2001. She said that Chelsea, her daughter, was jogging around the towers of the World Trade Center on 9/11 and [Hillary] went on the "Today" show ... and she said [Chelsea] was only saved because she ducked into a coffee shop at the last minute and she actually heard the airplane hit the building. And the announcer ... Katie Couric, introduced her and said, "On 9/11, Mrs. Clinton was not just a senator, she was a concerned parent." Morris then provided a laundry list of ethical problems associated with the former first lady:
While Morris lashed into Sen. Clinton, he did have words of praise for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, whom Morris thinks would be an excellent challenger to Hillary. You start with the fact that they're totally different models of feminism. Hillary got ahead because her husband was president. Is there anybody in the world who thinks Hillary would be running for president now if her husband hadn't been president? There was no way she would have got elected to the Senate in a state she never lived in, with no primary, and won that seat overwhelmingly if it weren't for the fact that her husband were the chief executive. When asked if he were really thinking about leaving the U.S. if Hillary wins because of the danger she poses, Morris replied, "No, no, I'm joking about that. There are people who actually believe Hillary would kill them, but I don't." If you would like to sound off on this issue, participate in today's WND Poll. Related offers: Hillary's Sir Edmund tale and other prevarications exposed in "I've Always Been a Yankees Fan." Hillary's Secret War: The Clinton Conspiracy to Muzzle Internet Journalists Ron Brown's Body: How One Man's Death Saved the Clinton Presidency and Hillary's Future Hillary stars in 'Help! Mom! There are Liberals Under My Bed' Meet "The Women Targeted by the Clinton Machine" 'Mega Fix': Stunning new DVD documents the dazzling political deceit that led to 9-11 40% off! Clinton's fatal 'Intelligence Failure' "King of Cons: Exposing the Dirty, Rotten Secrets of the Washington Elite and Hollywood Celebrities" Previous stories: Dick Morris: Hillary wants to be 'President Rodham' Words from Hillary '07 don't match Hillary '03 Constitution Party aims to thwart Hillary, GOP Dick Morris: Now or never for Hillary Hillary comes out for same-sex marriage, sort of ... Hillary receives demand to admit campaign fraud Hillary's brother targeted in new investigation demand Hillary comes clean about Sir Edmund Clinton lawyer Kendall accused of filing false statement Lawsuit: Clinton scheme cost donor millions New Senate complaint prepared against Hillary Hillary's dismissal in fraud suit appealed Clintons top all-star cast of fraud-case witnesses Trial set in civil suit against Bill Clinton Top donor seeks to expose 'Hillary's Chappaquiddick' FEC fines Hillary fund-raising group Did Bill Clinton know of gala's financial fraud? Hillary's ex-staffer pleads not guilty How Hillary's money man was nailed for L.A. gala Hillary's finance chief indicted for L.A. gala Poll: Hillary Clinton most admired woman Will 2000 fund-raiser scam bite Hillary?
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