Book to atone for war vote, says Jones

U.S. Rep. Walter Jones, the conservative Republican who turned against the war in Iraq, is writing a book called called "My Daddy's Not Dead Yet" which he hopes will atone for his vote to go to war, according to Congress Daily.

The title of the book was inspired by a visit in 2007 to a classroom at Johnson Elementary School at Camp Lejeune, in which a little boy expressed the fear that his father would be killed in Iraq, Rob Christensen reports.

Jones said his vote to authorize the war in Iraq has left him with deep guilt. "I profess to be a man of faith," Jones told Congress Daily," but I didn't vote my conscience."

Jones said any proceeds from the book will be donated to help treat the wounded. He said the Iraq experience is making him take a hard look at President Barack Obama's request for more troops for Afghanistan.

"We're trying to police the world," Jones told George Wilson. " Every great nation prior to America that tried to police the world has failed economically. That's why I tell people that I'm a Pat Buchanan American. I want to stop trying to take care of the world and fix this country. Our problems are so deep that there is no easy way to fix them."

Hagan on Bush's Iraq assessment

Kay Hagan said President Bush's progress report on the Iraq war was bittersweet.

Hagan, a candidate in the Democratic primary for Republican Elizabeth Dole's U.S. Senate seat, issued a statement today deploring Bush's decision to discontinue troop reductions after July.

She did commend his announcement that deployment tours will be reduced from 15 months to 12 months for troops deployed after Aug. 1, something she said she has long supported.

Hagan also seized the opportunity to condemn Dole's support of the war.

"Elizabeth Dole has been a consistent supporter of President Bush's war in Iraq," Hagan's statement reads. "She has voted to support it, failed to bring accountability to the process, and she has failed to support our troops by voting against protective gear and adequate rest and training time."

Poll: Jones out front

U.S. Rep. Walter Jones was widely thought to be in the fight of his political life because of his opposition to the Iraq war.

But his battle may not be as tough as many believed.

Jones, a Farmville Republican, has a commanding lead over GOP primary challenger Joe McLaughlin, according to a widely distributed new poll for the Jones campaign, reports Rob Christensen.

The survey found Jones leading McLaughlin by 54-16 percent.

The 3rd Congressional District primary has received national attention because McLaughlin made an issue of Jones’ opposition to continued U.S. involvement in the war in Iraq. The district has a strong military presence, including Camp Lejeune.

Conducted by National Research Inc., the poll surveyed 310 likely voters in the district on March 4 and March 6. The margin of error for the poll is plus or minus 5.57 percentage points. The Jones campaign made available a copy of the poll questions.

The survey has been distributed to key Republicans across the district, as well as political committees in Washington.

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