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Obama Downplays Campaign's Racial Factor
Hagel, a lifelong Republican who has been a frequent critic of the Iraq war, said Sunday he will decide about running by late summer after determining where he can best play a role to "make a better world."
After dining recently with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is also considering a run for president as an independent, Hagel said people might want to consider the two on a ticket.
![]() Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks at a rally in Kansas City, Mo., Saturday, May 12, 2007. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner) (Orlin Wagner - AP)
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"We didn't make any deals. But I think Mayor Bloomberg is the kind of individual who should seriously think about this," Hagel said.
"It's a great country to think about _ a New York boy and a Nebraska boy to be teamed up leading this nation," he said.
Hagel said it was time for the political system to be shaken up with a third-party candidacy. He explained that the GOP is no longer the party of "Eisenhower, of Goldwater, of Reagan," but rather a group hijacked by "single-minded, almost isolationist insulationists, power-projectors."
"I think the elections next year for president and other offices will be settled on the basis of what America will be looking at and wanting and demanding _ honest, competent, accountable leadership," Hagel said.
"This country is in trouble. The world is in trouble. And we need some new, fresh, independent ideas to lead this country forward," he said.
Hagel spoke on "Face the Nation" on CBS.
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WASHINGTON (AP) _ Republican presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani says he feels "very, very passionate" about abortion and opposes picking Supreme Court nominees based on their view of the ruling that legalized abortion.
"My view is that there shouldn't be a litmus test on Roe against Wade," the former New York City mayor said. "I'm going to select strict constructionist judges. They're free to take a look at Roe against Wade, take a look at the limitations, but I believe I should leave it to them to decide that."
Giuliani repeatedly has defended his positions, which have been criticized as contradictory, on late-term abortion, public funding for abortions and the Roe v. Wade decision.


