Daily Dose

Join Gov. Mitch Daniels (R-IN) on a Town Hall Teleconference at 11 a.m. to learn about "The Most Predictable Crisis." Invite all your friends and give them the opportunity to ask Gov. Daniels a question by forwarding this email and telling them to click here to get the call-in details.

March 13, 2012

"Just 10 percent of the country approves of the job that Congress is doing—and the most powerful member of the Senate is apparently not one of them. “I think Congress looks bad,” said Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid on CNN’s State of the Union.

March 12, 2012

From these diverse causes, the singular effect has been to reshape the job of members of Congress, especially senators. The great legislators that history celebrates—from Henry Clay to Bob Dole—are remembered because, through their skill and diligence, they built majority coalitions that would not have existed without them.

March 9, 2012

STAT OF THE DAY: Gridlock in Congress is causing many members of Congress to retire, including a number of proven problem-solvers. A total of 735 years of congressional experience will be lost in transition.

March 8, 2012

"Partisan gridlock at home threatens America’s future and is more controllable than are clashes with global enemies, former Defense Secretary Robert Gates [said] ... “We have lost the ability to execute even the most basic functions of government, much less solve the most difficult and divisive problems facing our country,” he said. “Much of the dysfunction comes down to an unwillingness to put aside short-term partisan gain and ideological purity for the long-term benefit of the country -- above all, an unwillingness to compromise.”

March 7, 2012

On Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME): "An astonishing thing happened this week in American politics. An incumbent United States senator decided not to run for reelection—not because she thought she might lose, but because she was sure to win. She didn't want to face the prospect of serving any longer in a rancorous, venomous, poisonously partisan environment where consensus and compromise are seen as a disease."

March 5, 2012

"I see a critical need to engender public support for the political center, for our democracy to flourish and to find solutions that unite rather than divide us," Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) writes in The Washington Post.

March 2, 2012

"Given her continued popularity, her retirement is a rebuke to the partisanship that has come to define the political times in Washington," Paul Kane and Chris Cillizza say in The Washington Post.

March 1, 2012

Yesterday, Sen. Olympia Snowe announced her retirement from the U.S. Senate after 33 years of congressional service.

February 29, 2012

No Labels is high-fiving House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-MD) for planning a vote on a bipartisan legislative proposal to significantly reduce the deficit.

February 28, 2012

Pages