Gas Prices About To Become An Election Issue
Prices are rising at the pump, and the candidates for President are starting to notice.
Prices are rising at the pump, and the candidates for President are starting to notice.
Rising prices at the pump could lead to problems at the voting booth.
One analyst sees a way that the current GOP race could indeed lead to a brokered convention.
Rick Santorum swept three states that are off the media radar screen. Will it revive his campaign?
Could things possibly get worse on Capitol Hill? Grover Norquist seems to relish the possibility.
One of the less ballyhooed parts of ObamaCare has been tossed aside as too expensive before it even went into effect.
College towns and lily white enclaves top the list of best educated cities.
51.5 percent of Americans disapprove of President Obama’s job performance. It’s still his race to lose.
Is the GOP race really down to just two men at this point?
Will 2012 be the Republican version of the 2008 race between President Obama and Hillary Clinton?
The Obama Administration tells Congress that it doesn’t need to comply with the War Powers Act because the Act does not apply to the mission in Libya.
Congress is coming back to Washington and gas prices continue to rise. Expect a lot of demagoguery, but very little in the way of solutions.
The home mortgage interest deduction benefits Democrat-voting states most! Is the fix in?
One simple proposal on the size of the House of Representatives.
Polls show the Republicans easily retaking the House but falling short in the Senate. But 2006 showed us that wave elections can produce shocking outcomes.
Even with some key seats trending Democrat, Republicans are primed to take over both Houses of Congress come November 2.
Democrats are sending some of their candidates to the Death Panels.
For most of the year, a GOP takeover in the Senate seemed beyond the realm of possibility. That’s no longer the case.
Some Republicans in Congress are worried they won’t be able to control the future Congressmen and Senators that the Tea Party might be sending to Washington.
Will Democrats use a lame-duck session of Congress to pass legislation they can’t get through otherwise ? They might try, but I doubt they’ll succeed.