David Keene
David Keene
David A. Keeneis an American political consultant, former Presidential advisor, and newspaper editor, currently the Opinion Editor of The Washington Times. Keene was the president of the National Rifle Association for the traditional two one-year terms from 2011 to 2013. From 1984 to 2011, he was the chairman of the American Conservative Union. Keene has worked for the political campaigns of Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Robert Dole, and Mitt Romney...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth20 May 1945
CountryUnited States of America
From now on, this administration will find it difficult to muster support on the right without explaining why it should be forthcoming. The days of the blank check have ended.
We don't want this argument to be obscured by those who would suggest that anyone who is for more and more government power is somehow on the side of the right, and those who are against it or are skeptical of such grants are on the side of the wrong. This is an important question of all Americans on the left, the right or in the middle.
We don't just look at a small piece of the SOA stack. We've integrated all these technologies to work together as part of a platform.
Fusion is all about integrating SOA technologies together. We want to establish Fusion Middleware as the SOA standard for BAM implementations.
Her Second Amendment positions would lose her the primary in North Carolina unless she modifies them.
If someone within your family is doing something that's certainly wrong, if not illegal, you have a duty to say, That's not us. That's what people are saying.
You can't do these things on a basis of trust. There have to be some sort of checks and balances. Lurking behind this is something nobody knows about.
Both sides know the last election was just the beginning of the next election. It's clear there has been no attempt to have any kind of getting along.
Conservatives throughout the United States are increasingly losing faith in the president and the Republican leadership in Congress to adequately prioritize and rein in overall federal spending, American taxpayers have witnessed the largest spending increase under any preceding president and Congress since the Great Depression.
I've been astounded by Bush in his relationship with Republicans in Congress. In my lifetime, there has been no Republican president who has spent as much effort and as much time electing people of his own party to the Congress, or less time talking to them after they got there.
The one big strategic error - which was a political error and an economic error of grand proportions - was the prescription drug bill.
The one big strategic error -- which was a political error and an economic error of grand proportions -- was the prescription drug bill.
You can think of our BAM technology as a real-time system for building operational dashboards to let you understand what's going on in your business processes.
This is not a partisan issue. It is an issue of safeguarding the fundamental freedoms of all Americans so that future administrations do not interpret our laws in ways that pose constitutional concerns.