The results of California's inaugural "top-two" primary are in, and some voters will be seeing double in November.
The results of California's inaugural "top-two" primary are in, and some voters will be seeing double in November.
Woody Allen once famously said that, “90 percent of life is just showing up.” Our members of Congress apparently aren’t big believers in this philosophy.
Thank goodness, members of Congress do not drive in the Indianapolis 500. “Disaster” would not begin to describe such a fiasco. Instead of applying speed and racing skill to progress through a field of 32 other drivers, a contingent of congressional racers would employ extreme measures.
I've never been so devastated by the defeat of a conservative Republican to the U.S. Senate as I was this Tuesday. It's not just that Nebraska Attorney General Jon Bruning is a great guy: a warm, humble, often hilarious teddy bear of a man who's the type of person you'd be proud to represent you in Congress.
In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book, "Profiles in Courage,"John F. Kennedy wrote admiringly of U.S. senators who put the national interest ahead of partisanship, ideological purity and regional parochialism. Many sacrificed their careers because of their stands, but Kennedy held them aloft as examples to be emulated for their moral courage, intellectual independence and public candor.
King and Cutler both spoke in support of the "No Budget, No Pay" legislation at the "No Labels" forum on the University of New England Portland Campus Friday night. The legislation would stop congressional paychecks if members of Congress do not meet the deadline for passing the federal budget.
“Party leaders have decided, yet again, that their members shouldn’t take tough votes in an election year. The problem is, every other year is an election year,” said former senator and No Labels co-founder George Voinovich.
By Sean Lengell
The Washington Times
Proposed bipartisan legislation that would stop Congress from getting paid if they fail to pass a budget on time is winning fans on and off Capitol Hill.
The list of co-sponsors and endorsements is growing for identical House and Senate "No Budget, No Pay" bills introduced in December by Rep. Jim Cooper, Tennessee Democrat, and Sen. Dean Heller, Nevada Republican.
Mark McKinnon, co-founder of the nonpartisan group “No Labels,” said it’s no wonder lawmakers are getting out of Dodge.
“No Labels shares Sen. Snowe’s frustration with the polarization and gridlock that is gripping Capitol Hill,” McKinnon said. “Too many competent legislators have retired from Congress for the same reason as Sen. Snowe. They’re sick and tired of being trapped in a rotten system.”
"It puts a human face on a sad truth," said William Galston, a former Clinton White House aide and co-founder of the bipartisan advocacy group No Labels. That truth, he said, is that "especially in Congress, the polarization of our party system has now reached the point where building bridges has become almost impossible when the issue is one of any significance."