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2007-11-04 15:27:49 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Politics & Government Politics

by yawho: Oh my!! lol !!!

2007-11-04 15:31:42 · update #1

Our Veterans Come First : I never heard that, Why is GW a hybred???

2007-11-04 15:33:12 · update #2

Okay my Honest opinion and I like him.., I think he is just saying things he doesnt believe just to get the support of the Republican party

2007-11-04 15:35:23 · update #3

Kulka: as in RE developer Kulka?? I am in NY, he cleaned up the streets better than Dinkins. But he was not popular grated on everyone and as President he would do that too, but you must admit he is very competent, he WILL get Bin Ladin, he is very tough which we need against all the challenges we are going to have (Russia, Iran, China)

2007-11-04 15:52:57 · update #4

11 answers

He is a hybrid, like GW.

2007-11-04 15:31:38 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 5 4

Giuliani is a "politician" is trying on be on both sides of the fence at the same time. He says this, but will tolerate that. I don't know if you lived in New York City when he was mayor,. I lived there then, and he was not a good mayor. He just happened to be mayor during 9/11 and now he is using it as his claim to fame. Don't believe it. He did not do much then either. He was not a good mayor and will definitely not be a good president.

2007-11-04 15:39:15 · answer #2 · answered by Kukla 2 · 1 1

He is about as far from being a social conservative as you can be with out getting arrested, but he is a Bush clone of foreign policy and the war on terror. He has even hired Bush's advisers.

2007-11-04 15:55:51 · answer #3 · answered by meg 7 · 1 1

He is a blue state conservative. In order for a Republican to get elected in the blue states they have to come to the center.

Unlike Romney, Rudy isn't flip-flopping.

You see the same thing with red-state liberals. Janet Napolitano of Arizona would be a Republican in New York.

2007-11-04 15:32:13 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

I think Guiliani belongs in a different party. Just like the senator from my home state of MN, Norm Coleman. Both are former democrats. Neither of them are conservative. They are RINO republicans.

2007-11-04 16:03:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

He is 50/50 or either a moderate or a centrist!!

2007-11-05 03:39:15 · answer #6 · answered by Vagabond5879 7 · 0 0

I need to see him in more detailed debating. I am wary of someone who can be elected in such a liberal city as NYC. I won't count him out yet though.

2007-11-04 15:31:47 · answer #7 · answered by TexasTrev38 5 · 3 1

I consider him an evolved republican.

He's progressive in his ideas.

2007-11-05 07:36:55 · answer #8 · answered by DesignDiva1 5 · 0 0

ONE THING FOR DAMN SURE.

He is more conservative than any of the DEMS.

2007-11-04 16:29:38 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I agree, for the most part they're not................

2007-11-04 15:31:10 · answer #10 · answered by Brian 7 · 4 2

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