Republicans Have Little Incentive To Move Forward On Immigration Reform
Despite conventional wisdom, there remains little incentive for the GOP to change its position on immigration reform.
Despite conventional wisdom, there remains little incentive for the GOP to change its position on immigration reform.
To a large degree, the Democratic Party’s supposed advantage among women voters appears to not exist this year.
Everything old is new again.
A travel ban sounds like a simple solution to a complex problem. Like most simple solutions, though, it becomes far less appealing when you think about the details.
Sometimes, being evasive in answering a question just makes a politician look silly. This is one of those times.
Remember the border crisis? Yea, it’s not much of a crisis these days.
Will the President back track on his promise of further action on immigration if the GOP wins the Senate?
Is former Senator Larry Pressler surging in his Independent bid to win back his old Senate seat?
Could Alison Lundergran Grimes be surging? Maybe, but we’ll need more evidence to be sure.
If the GOP wins the Senate in November, their majority could prove to be fleeting.
While the battle for the Senate remains up in the air, the Republican majority in the House remains secure.
Speaker Boehner wants to delay a vote on the ISIS war until January, but any such debate will be meaningless because Congress has already abdicated responsibility.
Two weeks after it seemed to be tightening, there are signs the battle for control of the Senate may be moving in the GOP’s direction.
Third-party candidates in several states could end up having a big say in the battle for control of the Senate.
The next Attorney General will likely see their nomination taken up by Senators who will not be in office past December. That’s somewhat disturbing, but it’s become all too common in Washington.
Opponents of marriage equality clearly don’t like the idea of a “big tent” in the GOP on the issue.
One of last members of President Obama’s original cabinet is stepping aside.
While it still seems unlikely that he’ll run, Mitt Romney does seem to be leaving the door open to a third run at the White House.
Once again, Justice Ginsburg is telling people she has no plans to resign, but her explanation is a bit different this time.
As we head into a new conflict, perhaps we ought to give more thought to fiscal issues than the President is to overall strategy.
A majority of Americans don’t care very much who controls Congress.
Chief Justice Roberts lamented recently that an increasingly partisan confirmation process could mean that Justices who have contributed much to the Court would not be confirmed today. He’s right.
The Kansas Supreme Court may have just upended the battle for control of the U.S. Senate
The GOP has bounced back significantly from the lows it experienced after last year’s government shutdown.
President Obama hits new job approval lows, while the GOP seems poised for success in November,
The Affordable Care Act is playing almost no role in the midterm elections.
A number of factors unique to 2014 make it likely that control of the Senate could be up in the air for months after Election Day.
Kansas’s highest court heard argument today in a legal dispute that could play a huge role in deciding who controls the Senate after November 4th.
So much for the President’s promise about ‘no ground troops.’
Republicans still have an advantage, but Democrats seem to be holding their own in the battle for Senate control.
The Obama Administration’s legal justification for war against ISIS is laughably flimsy.
For purely political reasons, the Administration is delaying the announcement of new executive action on immigration.
The Kansas Senate race is becoming unexpectedly interesting.
A political earthquake in the Sunflower State that could have a big impact on the battle for control of the Senate.
Cowardice, or politically prudent?