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...TIME he plans to give Vice President Edwards "a very powerful position, properly utilized. I don't think it has been properly utilized in this Administration. I think it's been excessive, and I intend to be a President who is on top of what's happening in every regard. On final decisions, I'm not going to be pushed into them the way I sense this President was." As for his view of the job, Edwards said, "We will talk constantly about issues. He'll know what I believe and what I think needs to be done...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The Decision: The Gleam Team | 7/19/2004 | See Source »

...charge of their own country will take the steam out of the armed resistance. And in Allawi they hope they have found a man tough enough to back up his inaugural words: "I say that we will hunt them down to give them their just punishment." But many Iraqis regard this second appointed regime as just another set of American puppets. "Nothing has changed," says Harith al-Dhari, head of the Association of Muslim Scholars and a Sunni sheik who some U.S. officials say is linked to insurgents. "This is a government created by the U.S. that cannot exist without...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq: After The Hand-Off: Taking Back The Streets | 7/12/2004 | See Source »

...Democrats may not know yet how closely they want to embrace a film that sometimes lunges at Bush without regard for niceties of context and counterargument. Democratic moderates may find Moore's style too extreme, pugnacious, rabble-rousing--even if his intention is to rouse the rabble to vote the Democrats back into office. So as Kerry strategists move their man to the center, they hope to benefit from the Fahrenheit 9/11 phenomenon and to keep from being tainted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World According To Michael | 7/12/2004 | See Source »

...electorate is pretty evenly split between those likely to support President George W. Bush, the Republican candidate, and Senator John Kerry, his Democratic opponent. And Kerry's dramatic choice of a running mate last week - his primary rival John Edwards, a charismatic North Carolina senator who is widely regarded as a better campaigner than Kerry - isn't likely to change that. Bush has polarized the U.S. into camps of those who love the President - who believe that, since Sept. 11, 2001, he has shown steadfast leadership at a time of great peril - and those who hate him - who believe that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Nation Divided | 7/11/2004 | See Source »

...hard to argue with the guy. As The Economist noted just this week, “in private, much of Europe’s political class detests Mr Bush and what he stands for, which they think is throwing the superpower’s weight around with no regard either for the rules of law, international treaties or the views of allies.” America—packed with its flag-toting, war-mongering citizens—is regarded as a country full of people who take no interest in the rest of the world...

Author: By Lia C. Larson, | Title: Football Bench-Warmers | 7/9/2004 | See Source »

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