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1. Rudy brought Caroline to City Hall on Take Your Daughters to Work Day in 1994 and 1995, his first two years as mayor, but never again — because by 1996 "the relationship between Giuliani and his twentysomething press secretary had so poisoned the marriage that all such family events were impossible."
2. The Giulianis went on a family vacation after he was elected in 1993 — and then never did again.
3. On Father's Day 1995, Giuliani told reporters he was going to play baseball with his son — and instead went to a basement suite at City Hall with his "ever-present" press secretary.
4. Neither his wife nor his kids went to Rudy's victory party when he was reelected in 1997.
5. The kids aren't listed in Giuliani's bio on his Web page.
6. He skipped his son's high-school graduation.
7. He went to Caroline's but left without speaking to her. "I am celebrating with my mom, my stepfather, my brother, and our other family members," she said then.

2007-08-26 11:40:55 · 7 answers · asked by marczo1 2 in Politics & Government Elections

7 answers

This guy makes Bill Clinton look like a poster boy for family values and morality. What is incredible is that he is WAY in the lead to get the Republican nomination. And I believe the powers that be intend him to be the Republican nominee because they feel he is the most "electable".

2007-08-26 11:48:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I think that hes a cheating, lying toolbag. Id rather have a president thats been married to the same woman for 50 years (Ron Paul) than one who would rather bone his secretary. Giuliani's kids dont even support him. That should tell you something.

2007-08-26 20:16:31 · answer #2 · answered by crucial_master 3 · 0 0

1. Not by business
2. Maybe he was too busy being mayor, maybe not, still not my business
3. Not my business
4. Not my business
5. Not my business
6. Not my business
7. Not my business

That is what I say. I'm not voting for him, but not because of his personal life which is not my business. Often good leaders are not great family men. All people have human failings.

2007-08-26 19:14:24 · answer #3 · answered by winfielder74 3 · 0 0

Most American will think, "Hmmmmm.....pretty typical politician."
As Gore Vidal said, "Apparently a democracy is a place where numerous elections are held at great cost without issues and with interchangeable candidates."
And, as Philo Vance said, "The democratic theory is that if you accumulate enough ignorance at the polls, you produce intelligence."
We don't get any better than we deserve. -RKO- 08/26/07

2007-08-26 18:58:48 · answer #4 · answered by -RKO- 7 · 1 1

Are you trying to bash a good mayor and possibly the best 2008 presidential candidate?

2007-08-26 20:41:10 · answer #5 · answered by I hate Hillary Clinton 6 · 0 0

I think most Americans will disregard his personal life and judge his suitability for The Presidency on his track record in government and his proposed policies. I think he is good on gay rights and equal rights for all races and ethnic groups, but I won't vote for him because I think we can do better than solving our problems with lethal methods like abortion and capital punishment.

Same goes for most other candidates. Ron Paul and Joe Schriner are exceptions I may consider.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/nonlethalalternatives

2007-08-26 18:50:26 · answer #6 · answered by Yaktivistdotcom 5 · 1 1

Why would it matter what just Americans think?

Anyways, I'm American... I'd say it's pretty obvious he doesn't care for his family and would rather spend time with his secretary.

2007-08-26 18:49:20 · answer #7 · answered by Rikku 3 · 0 1

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