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President Bush endures as a potent fund-raiser

Another useful reminder today about President Bush: even as his approval ratings remain abysmal, even as Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama routinely treat him as a pincushion, and even as John McCain implicitly criticizes aspects of the administration's foreign policy, a hard core of loyalists still are willing to fork over money when Bush comes calling on behalf of the Republican Party.

The Washington Times reports today that with 2008 not quite a third over, the president so far has generated more than $30 million for various GOP groups and candidates -- close to half of what he raised all of last year for various party coffers.

The story notes that Tuesday night, he headlined a $2-million fund-raiser at a home in Virginia for McCain's presidential campaign. Earlier, he made a successful financial foray into Florida.

And today, he was adding to his bottom-line figure.

After delivering his latest discourse on the war in Iraq at the U.S. Air Force's National Museum in Dayton, Ohio, Bush and his entourage drove to a nearby neighborhood for a fund-raiser to benefit the state's Republican Party (which needs the help after the bath it took in the 2006 midterm election).

The report provided to other members of the media by the Washington Post's Peter Baker recorded that Bush's motorcade "snaked through a new neighborhood known as Willow Creek Farm, a community of massive houses ...

with long driveways, multi-car garages, pools, pool houses and five-acre grassy lots."

Hosting the gathering was Marty Grunder, chief executive of a landscaping firm.

This evening, before returning to the White House, he'll be the star attraction at a similar event in Sewickley, Pa.

Less than a third of the nation may give Bush good grades these days, according to the polls, but that's enough to provide a steady supply of the proverbial mother's milk of modern politics.

-- Don Frederick

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Comments

Anyone doubt you gotta PAY to PLAY?? Like Bear bosses - SEC won't be investigating top officers' sales b4 the CRASH! That's where the PAY to Play goes; legal loopholes, courtesy of Congress, and RNC + DNC.

'pecunia non olet' (augustus allegedly told his staff when they expressed disgust at his plan to collect a fee for the use of public toilets).
so when a transaction smells bad, and it's not the money that reeks, it could be either the hand that gives, or the hand that takes. or both of them.

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Our Bloggers

Don FrederickDon Frederick has served as an editor helping guide coverage of every presidential election since 1984. He is a third-generation Washingtonian, so watching the political world comes naturally to him.

A graduate of Northwestern University, he was a reporter for newspapers in Colorado, New Mexico and Texas before joining the (now-defunct) Los Angeles Herald Examiner in 1983. Hired by The Times in 1989, he has worked in its Washington bureau since 1996 — a perch providing him a close-up view of the impeachment of President Clinton, the government's response to 9/11 and the day-to-day wrangling of the two major parties.
Andrew MalcolmAndrew Malcolm's immigrant parents repeatedly stressed the importance of active participation in a democracy. Early lessons included learning the alphabetical list of states by watching televised roll calls of national political conventions. That childhood exposure led to a lifelong fascination with politics, including 40-plus years of covering them and a brief stint practicing them as press secretary to Laura Bush in 1999-2000.

A veteran foreign and national correspondent, Malcolm served on the Times Editorial Board and was a Pulitzer finalist in 2004. He is the author of 10 nonfiction books and father of four.

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