Word: sekulow
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...tried to listen closely and be fair. I haven't heard from anyone who thought I was unfair or unbalanced. Jay Sekulow, the chief council for the ACLJ, blurbed the book as a "must-read...
...answer came swiftly from President Bush's outraged Christian base: a lot more. Religious leaders in the U.S. assailed the White House, with activists like Jay Sekulow--who helped rally support for Bush's Supreme Court nominees--bombarding Karl Rove's evangelical liaison with e-mail. Within 48 hours, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had called Afghan President Hamid Karzai and urged Afghanistan's Foreign Minister, who was visiting Washington, to spare Rahman. President Bush declared, "We have got influence in Afghanistan, and we are going to use it to remind them that there are universal values." A White House...
...that this one will be confirmed, the main question is how the sides are positioning themselves for the ones to come. Democrats who indicated earlier this summer that they thought Roberts was an acceptable choice got an earful from liberal interest groups on hanging tough. Conservative counselors Jay Sekulow, Ed Meese and Leonard Leo, who advised the White House on picking Roberts, sent a memo to colleagues noting that the same kind of stories about Roberts sailing through were written more than a decade earlier about Clarence Thomas. "There is far, far too much at stake," they wrote...
Armies too are being mobilized. Jay Sekulow, chief counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, a powerful conservative group based in Washington, plans to recruit Christian activists for the fight through his daily radio talk show, his weekly TV program and a massive database of followers. He will be telling people to flood Capitol Hill with telephone calls and messages of support for the President's nominee. Barely an hour after Bush announced the O'Connor resignation, Sekulow had sent an e-mail to 850,000 sympathetic souls. "We want people to prepare for a battle," he told...
...intense coverage of Terri Schiavo's experience seems to have made many Americans think, That could be me. Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the American Center for Law and Justice, which has worked on behalf of Schiavo's parents, doubts that their efforts will motivate more families to take conflicts to court. Instead, he says, "I think people will be much more specific in what they want their medical treatment to be." Indeed, Johanson says that at his hospice, the case is "creating fear in patients that their wishes will not be met"; many are responding by "getting things down...