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Another conservative talk-show host, William Bennett, said on CNN
that Limbaugh's statement wasn't a good idea. "The locution -- `I want him to fail' -- is not what you say the first week the man's been inaugurated," he said. He noted that former President Bill Clinton used to talk about Limbaugh all the time. "It never helped Bill Clinton," Bennett said. "It certainly helped Rush." It seemed clear that Limbaugh knew exactly what kind of impact he would make when he first said he wanted Obama to fail. "I would be honored if the drive-by media headlined me all day long: `Limbaugh: I Hope Obama Fails,'" he said on the air. "Somebody's gotta say it." Limbaugh, who just marked his 20th year in syndication and signed a contract last year reportedly paying him $38 million a year through 2016, has outraced his competitors to be the voice of opposition. It could be a valuable role, or it could misread the national mood. He had mixed results last year; launching "Operation Chaos" to urge listeners to vote for Hillary Rodham Clinton in Democratic primaries to hurt Obama. He virulently opposed John McCain in the Republican nomination race, forging an uneasy peace when GOP voters didn't listen. Limbaugh said the "I hope he fails" statement came after an explanation of his opposition to liberal politics. "I want the country to succeed and the stated policies of the administration will not achieve that objective," he said. "I support the president but I opposed his policies, just as the left claimed to support the troops but opposed their mission of victory. I thus am confident that all conservatives want the country to succeed." ___ On the Net:
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