It reminds me of the famous headline, 'Harvard Beats Yale, 29-29.'
An "originalist" Justice ratifies a de facto amendment to the Constitution
News reports often talk around the reality of today's obstructive politics. This one described clearly what is going on. We take our successes where we can find them!
Harry Reid's party learns a bad lesson from Mitch McConnell's.
The anti-filibuster campaign begins at home
Reporters who bother to tell us what's 'true,' and some who forget
That rare document: a 66-year-old "must-read" memorandum
The surprising emergence of the 'Republican majority' in the Senate
A restaurant manager has a message for our legislators
The possible unintended consequences of Obama's bold step against obstructionism.
As the Senate's minority leader points out, someone is 'arrogantly circumventing' normal Constitutional processes
The president takes a 'partisan' stand, which is the right one in this case
Congress does some budgetary business, which is good. And then...
A lawyer argues that the filibuster is illegal; plus, the politics of South Carolina spread up to Maine
A Senator doesn't "want" an already-enacted law to take effect. How much should that matter?
The minority takes another step in blocking majority rule. It's good for them in the short term, and will be bad for everyone in the long run.
Senators McConnell and Reid on who did what to the jobs bill
"The greatest trick the filibuster ever pulled was convincing the world it didn't exist.'
Room for improvement everywhere, including at the most thorough TV news show
Same story, different narrative: better results