From today’s front-page story on how Thompson is poaching fundraisers from McCain:
“I am very sorry to see what’s happened to John,” Dowd said in an interview. “I don’t think his campaign is being well run. It’s been over-managed. He blew through $8 1/2 million. It’s a difficult thing to leave a friend and go to another friend. But we
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Nathan Thornburgh reports on what might have been:
Sure, there is a very real national-security threat in having a porous border. But a large — if unquantifiable — percentage of the people crossing that line illegally are not newcomers but rather people who have already established lives in the U.S. and would qualify for amnesty. If
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Here’s the thing I don’t understand about right-wing opposition to the now-collapsed immigration bill: Do they think they’re gonna get something better next time around? Sources close to “grand bargainers” say that the current feeling is that the failure of the bill will wind up creating momentum for a increased Democratic majority, …
Unlike the Presidential candidates, at least Swampland is talking about Social Security. Social Security is not a “poor, little, teeny-tiny” program. It takes almost 15 percent of our income and is a $12 trillion unfunded liability. Right now, we receive a paltry single digit rate of return on Social Security, and our children will …
Of course not: “Gilmore Will Join Candidates Bypassing Iowa Straw Poll”
Of course, Gilmore doesn’t either, so…
UPDATE: Oh, Sean, joking, dear, joking…
Two Editorials
[Michael Kinsley joins us with a thought that he’d rather not hold for print]
Newspaper editorials don’t get much attention these days, and most are written as if they don’t even want attention. But there were two screaming for attention yesterday.
An extraordinarily vindictive editorial in The New York Times not only …
More heated debate on the Hill, when Lindsey Graham got all clutch-pearls over an amendment offered by Obama:
It would undercut ”everybody over here who’s walked the plank and told our base, ‘You’re wrong,”’ Graham said. ”So when you’re out on the campaign trail, my friend, tell them about why we can’t come together. This is
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Innovation improves our lives. This season, I was able to watch my Dallas Stars, whose games are only on local television, from any computer that has an internet connection and hardly missed a game. Technology is one issue area that should be of particular interest to Swampland readers. It has been an issue I have followed my entire …
As you might guess, I’ve been watching C-SPAN’s coverage of the immigration debate. It’s been fairly typically, uhm, sedate, but I just saw Trent Lott give a particularly impassioned speech on behalf of… well, not for or against the bill itself, but against the cloture vote, as it would prevent that august body from, I quote, …
Dick: Seems to me, reading you this week, that although you’ve left public office, you’re still infected with political blather, Frank Luntz-style. For example, the word “Ownership.” That tested really well in focus groups, but what does it mean? The 47 million people who don’t have health insurance–the vast majority of them hardworking …
Yes, this really is my father, posting in the comments section of Swampland:
“The set of purple horses is a null set. The set of Dick Armey’s intelligent insights is a null set. That’s two null sets. Not just one.”
In set theory, two sets are the same if they contain the same elements. The two sets you describe have the same elements
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Jeez, I’m going to miss the Iowa straw poll. I mean, has there ever been a cheesier event in the history of American politics? I have such fond memories of this G.O.P. fundraiser–like the 2000 event, when the busloads of Steve Forbes “supporters” started rolling in: hundred of illegal immigrants culled from the local packing plants, …