On today's Problem-Solver's Daily, how can President Obama restore faith in the government, the filibuster is back in the news and an across-the-aisle retweet shows that both sides can agree on issues.
On today's Problem-Solver's Daily, how can President Obama restore faith in the government, the filibuster is back in the news and an across-the-aisle retweet shows that both sides can agree on issues.
In today's Problem-Solver's Daily, we talk about a shift in strategy in Washington and budget ideas both sides can agree on.
Soccer moms and NASCAR dads are a thing of the past. These days, it's all about the problem-solving voter. Problem-solving voters care about solutions and getting Washington to stop fighting and start fixing.
BREAKING PLEDGES: Earlier this year, a few freshman lawmakers fought back against Grover Norquist's tax pledge. Now, Lindsey Graham (R-SC) is urging his Republican counterparts to break the pledge altogether. In order to reach a grand bargain, Graham said he would consider eliminating loopholes in the tax code even if they aren't replaced by additional tax cuts: Justin Sink for The Hill: Sen.
No Labels is high-fiving former Florida Governor Jeb Bush for commenting that far right ideologues now have so much power in the Republican party that his father George H.W. Bush and Ronald Reagan, wouldn’t be welcome.
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush spoke for the piece of the Republican party that has felt pretty neglected lately when he said Ronald Reagan and his father wouldn't fit with today's Republican party. "There are still a lot of us trying to put the compassion in conservatism," No Labels Co-Founder Mark McKinnon says in The New York Times.
Following the Super Committee's failure to trim the federal budget last year, the nation's military is scheduled for a $500 billion hit in automatic cuts. However a group of about 30 senators is trying to find solutions.