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
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.
This is the dangerous side of what's going on.
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.
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.
They like Bush. But they are frustrated and disappointed with some things the administration has done. And the frustration is deep because government spending and growth of government are at the core of beliefs of many people here.
I don't think that he's made much of an impression outside Washington as a strong leader.
But we are happy to acquire technologies where they help us fill out the pieces of the stack that we can plug in, without causing problems for our development team or customers.
If he (Bush) comes up with a winnable conservative nominee, even if that person faces a fight in Congress, he will have drawn his people back to him.
George Bush is a conservative and most conservatives like him and support him. But most conservatives, at one level or another, are troubled by much of what they see going on in our government.
I do think that a lot of Americans are saying that in pursuing his perfectly legitimate mission to protect us from terrorism, is the president forgetting some of the safeguards that we would hope he would not forget.
The electorate on which they depend is getting more and more frustrated. If turnout drops 1.5 percent, that's a big deal.
Their argument is extremely dangerous in the long term because it can be used to justify all kinds of things that I'm sure neither the president nor the attorney general has thought about. ...The American system was set up on the assumption that you can't rely on the good will of people with power.