Did you really think he'd go away?
If you've missed Roy Moore, pine away no longer.
The ousted Alabama chief justice, of late a regular World Net Daily columnist, has returned to the political arena at the helm of a group aiming to restore America, which is in need of an Extreme Makeover: Political Edition more than ever now that Moore is no longer in a position to deposit a granite Ten Commandments monument with his name on it in a public courthouse.
Moore, who quoted former Gov. George Wallace for the idea that Democrats and Republicans are basically the same, was publicly noncommittal about a 2008 presidential run. That seems wise enough, considering he got trounced 2-to-1 in a gubernatorial race within his own party in his home state less than a year ago.
The ousted Alabama chief justice, of late a regular World Net Daily columnist, has returned to the political arena at the helm of a group aiming to restore America, which is in need of an Extreme Makeover: Political Edition more than ever now that Moore is no longer in a position to deposit a granite Ten Commandments monument with his name on it in a public courthouse.
Moore, who quoted former Gov. George Wallace for the idea that Democrats and Republicans are basically the same, was publicly noncommittal about a 2008 presidential run. That seems wise enough, considering he got trounced 2-to-1 in a gubernatorial race within his own party in his home state less than a year ago.
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