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I really am serious about this trying to get more of a bipartisan foreign policy, for example.
They helped create a bipartisan foreign policy based on resistance to the expansion of Soviet power.
"We ought to be working to develop bipartisan foreign policy.
"Nothing would make me happier," he said, "than if we could develop a bipartisan foreign policy."
"We'd like to see a real bipartisan foreign policy."
"There is a long tradition in this country, and one I strongly respect, of bipartisan foreign policy.
Overseas he seems eager to seize on new opportunities, first by rebuilding a bipartisan foreign policy.
A bipartisan foreign policy is based on honest and honorable discussion and debate.
Together, we'll have a bipartisan foreign policy true to our values and true to our friends.
Despite differences with their predecessors, each achieved triumphs by staying the course of a bipartisan foreign policy.
When I talk about a bipartisan foreign policy, I mean it."
And then the President called, he said tonight, and told him when they met that he wanted to establish a bipartisan foreign policy.
He added, however, that he supported the measure because "it's very important that we forge a bipartisan foreign policy."
I'm especially pleased that in the United States diplomatic initiative we once again have the beginnings, however uncertain, of a bipartisan foreign policy.
Their high point was the propagation of the bipartisan foreign policy that followed World War II.
He said, in effect, that the Iran-contra hearing may have served a useful purpose, that we may get a bipartisan foreign policy out of them."
The very cohesion that helped them mold a bipartisan foreign policy prompted them to mute their voices when the policy did not work.
I told the Congress and the American people that one of America's greatest strengths in the Cold War had been a bipartisan foreign policy.
He has promised to run a bipartisan foreign policy and to appoint "moderate persons of conservative views" to fill vacancies on the Supreme Court.
Suddenly, however, George Bush has within reach something that has eluded every President since Eisenhower: a bipartisan foreign policy on major issues.
But surely, he said, a "statute of limitations has been reached," suggesting the time has come to restore the bipartisan foreign policy of his father's generation.
And he said he intended to pursue "careful and open and honest consultations" with the Republicans in search of a bipartisan foreign policy.
The President would like to preserve his fragile liaison with the Speaker, which he described last week as "the beginnings, however uncertain, of a bipartisan foreign policy."
Tony Blankley, Mr. Gingrich's spokesman, said of the negotiations with Democrats that the goal was a bipartisan foreign policy.
Madeleine K. Albright, unanimously confirmed as Secretary of State, welcomed "a new era of bipartisan foreign policy."